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POPULAR HISTORY
OF THE
United States of America,
FROM
THE ABORIGINAL TIMES
TO
THE PRESENT DAY.
EMBRACING ,
AN ACCOUNT OF THE ABORIGINES; THE NORSEMEN IN THE NEW WORLD; THE
DISCOVERIES BY THE SPANIARDS, ENGLISH, AND FRENCH ; THE PLANT-
ING OF SETTLEMENTS; THE GROWTH OF THE COLONIES; THE
STRUGGLE FOR LIBERTY IN THE REVOLUTION; THE ESTAB-
LISHMENT OF THE UNION ; THE DEVELOPMENT
OF THE NATION ; THE CIVIL WAR ; AND
THE CENTENNIAL OF INDEPENDENCE.
BY
JOHN CLARK RIDPATH, A.M., LL.D.,
n
Prefesior of History in Indiana Asbury University; Author of Ridpath's Schcol Historitt
of the United States; Ridpath's Inductive Grammar; etc., etc.
lUnstrattb teit^ Paps, Charts, |)odraits, anb diagrams.
PHILLIPS & HU N '^^^"'■" ' ■""■-'^°
NEW YORK
VC'/ru,
1S83.
•J
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1876, by
JOHN T. JONES,
la the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
PREFACE.
Dear People of the United States: —
By this, my Preface, I offer to you a New History of your coun-
tiy and mine. The work is presented in the form of an abridged
narrative. My reasons for such a venture are brief, but, I trust, sat-
isfactory :
First, to every American citizen some knowledge of the history of
his country is indispensable. The attainment of that knowledge ought
to be made easy and delightful.
Second, the Centennial of the Republic furnishes an auspicious oc-
casion for the study of those great events which compose the warp
and woof of the new civilization in the West.
This book is intended for the average American; for the man
of business who has neither time nor disposition to plod through ten
or twenty volumes of elaborate historical dissertation; for the prac-
tical man of the shop, the counter, and the plow. The work is
dedicated to the household and the library of the working man. It is in-
scribed to the father, the mother, the son, and the daughter of the
American family. If father, mother, son, and daughter shall love
their country better — if they shall understand more clearly and ap-
preciate more fiiUy the founding, progress, and growth of liberty in
the New World — the author will be abundantly repaid.
(Hi)
iy PREFACE.
In the preparation of the work the following objects have been
kept in view:
I. To give an accurate and spirited Narrative of the principal
events in our National history from the aboriginal times to the pres-
ent day.
II. To discuss the Philosophy of that history as fully as possible
within the narrow limits of the work.
III. To avoid all Partiality, Partisanship, and Prejudice, as
things dangerous, baneful, and wicked. '^
IV. To preserve a clear and systematic Arrangement of the sev-
eral subjects, giving to every fact, whether of peace or wa cs true
place and importance in the narrative.
V. To give an Objective Representation by means of charts,
maps, drawings, and diagrams, of all the more important matters in
the history of the nation.
VI. To secure a Style and Method in the book itself which
shall be in keeping with the spirit and refinement of ^ae times.
Whether these important ends have been attained, dear People,
it is not my province but yours to decide. I have lab -ed earnestly
to reach the ideal of such a work, and if success has not rewarded
the effort, the failure has been in the execution rather than in the
plan and purpose.
I surrender the book, thus undertaken and completed, to You —
for whom it was intended. With diffidence I ask a considerate judg-
ment and just recognition of whatever worth the work may be found
to possess.
J. C. R.
Indiana Asbury UNivKRsrrY, 1
January 1, 1882. /
CONTENTS.
INTRODUCTION.
"^Vhat constitutes a period in history. — The period of the Aborigines. — The second
periu in the history of the United States. — Extends from the discovery of the conti-
nent to the establishment of permanent settlements. — The third period. — Reaches from
the first colonies to the war of the Revolution. — The fourth period. — Embraces the
Revoln » and the consolidation of the government. — The fifth period is most im-
portant Extends from the adoption of the Constitution to the present time. — The
names and dates of the several periods 39, 40.
i..
PART I.
ABORIGINAL AMERICA.
CHAPTER I.
' ■■(
THE BED MEN — ORIGIN, DISTBIBUTION, CHARACTER.
The Indians. — Their name accounted for. — Differences between them and the
Asiatics. — The origin of the Indian races unknown. — Theories controverted. — The
question likely to remain unsolved. — Language may give us light. — The Red men Gan-
owanians. — Habit i of that race. — Divisions of the aboriginal nations.--The Esqui-
maux.— Their manner of life. — The race of Algonquins. — Their distribution. — And
character. — The Huron-Iroquois. — Their domain. — Nature of their confederation. —
Their influence and character. — The Southern races. — Cherokees. — Mobilians. — Man-
ners and characteristics. — The Dakotas. — Their limits. — The Comanches. — The na-
tions beyond tlie Mountains. — Shoshonees. — Selish. — Klamaths. — Californians. — Aztecs
and Toltecs of old. — The Indian character in general. — Sense of personal inde-
pendence.— Passion for war. — Principles of war. — And of peace. — The Indian unsocial
and solitary. — His family organization. — The European family. — Diagram thereof. —
Indian method. — And diagram. — Aboriginal government. — Powers and limitations. —
Native religion. — Beliefs of the Red men. — Their arts. — Rudeness of the same. — The
Indian house. — Utensils. — Weapons. — Clothing. — Decorations. — Paint. — And writing. —
The savage tongues. — Peculiarities of Indian speech. — Personal appearance of the
aborigines. — Stature. — Features. — Bodily habit. — Indian amusements. — The dance. —
Other sports. — Gaming. — The use of tobacco. — Strong drinks. — Indian prospects. —
Hi-flections 41-50.
(v)
yi CONTENTS.
PART II.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY.
A. B. 986—1607.
CHAPTER II.
THE ICELANDERS AND NORWEGIANS IN AMERICA.
Herjulfson ia driven by a storm to the American coast. — Lief Erickson discovers
America. — Thorwald and Tliorstein Erickson make voyages. — Thorfinn Karlsefne ex-
plores the shores of Maine and Massachusetts. — Other voyages are made by the Norse-
men.— The name of Vinland. — Character of the sea-kings. — Voyages in the following
centuries. — No practical results from the Icelandic discoveries. — Their authenticity. —
Note 51-54.
CHAPTER III.
SPANISH DISCOVERIES.
Spain makes the New World known to Europe. — Old ideas about the figure of the
earth. — Columbus. — Sketch of his life. — The favor of Isabella. — Columbus departs on
his first voyage. — Discovers San Salvador, Cuba, and Hayti. — Second voyage of Co-
lumbus.— Third. — He discovers South America. — Fourth voyage. — Columbus's misfort-
unes and death. — Wrong done to his memory. — Vespucci makes two voyages to South
America. — Excitement in Europe on account of discoveries. — Colony planted on the
Isthmus. — Balboa discovers the Pacific— Ponce de Leon makes explorations in Flor-
ida.— Is killed in a fight with the Indians 54-58.
CHAPTER IV.
SPANISH DISCOVERIES — CONTINUED.
Cordova discovers Yucatan. — Grijalvaexplores Mexico. — Cortez lands at Tabasco. —
Terror pervades the country. — The natives are beaten back. — Cortez proceeds to Vera
Cruz. — Montezuma sends embassies and presents. — The Spaniards march towards the
capital. — And are forbidden to approach. — The Mexican tribes revolt. — Cortez reatlies
the city. — And enters. — His critical situation. — He seizes Montezuma. — Who acknowl-
edges the king of Spain. — The governor of Cuba sends forces against Cortez. — He over-
powers them. — Returns to the capital. — The struggle for possession of the city. — Mon-
tezuma is wounded. — And dies. — The Spaniards are victorious. — Mexico becomes a
Spanish province. — Magellan sails around South America. — Crosses the Pacific. — Is
killed at the Philippines. — His crew reach the East Indies. — Double the Cape of
(Jood Hope. — Return to Europe. — De Narvaez is appointed governor of Florida. — Ex-
plores the country around the Gulf. — The company embark in boats, and are wrecked. —
Four men reach San Miguel. — De Soto sets out on an expedition to explore and con-
quer Florida. — Arrives at Tampa Bay. — Marches into the interior. — Spends the winter
on Flint River. — The company march into South Carolina. — Cross into Georgia. — Capt-
ure Manville. — Spend the next winter on the Yazoo. — Discover the Mississippi. — Ex-
plore Arkansas and return to the Mississippi. — De Soto dies. — His men again march
Trestward to the mountains. — Return to the mouth of Red River. — Bnild boats and
descend the Mississippi. — Reach the Spanish settlements in Mexico. — Melendez comes
CONTENTS. vii
to Florida, and founds St. Augustine. — MurderB the Huguenots on the St. John's. —
Massacres the crews of the French vessels. — Extent of the Spanish explorations. — The
Portuguese voyage of Gaspar Cortereal. — He sells a cargo of Indian slaves in Portu-
gal 61-59.
CHAPTER V.
THE FKENCH IN AMERICA.
First acquaintance of the French with America. — Verrazzani is sent out to make ex-
plorations.— Arrives on the coast of North Carolina. — Explores the shores of the country
as far north as Newfoundland. — Cartier is sent on a voyage to America. — Beaches
Newfoundland and enters the Gulf and River of St. Lawrence. — Returns to Europe.
Sails on a second expedition. — Ascends the St. Lawrence to Montreal. — His crew are
attacked with scurvy.— He passes the winter near the site of Quebec—And returns to
France. — Roberval undertakes to colonize the country. — Cartier joined to the under-
taking.— Prisons of France are opened to furnish emigrants.— Expedition reaches the
St. Lawrence. — The leaders quarrel, and Cartier goes back to France. — The whole
colony returns. — Roberval sails with another fleet.— And is lost at sea. — Ribault con-
ducts a band of Huguenots to Port Royal.— Builds Fort Carolina.— The settlement is
abandoned.— The enterprise renewed by Laudonniere.— A Huguenot colony estab-
lished on the St. John's River.— But destroyed by Melendez.— De Gourges takes venge-
ance on the Spaniards. — La Roche is commissioned to plant colonies in America.
French prisons again opened.— A settlement is made on Sable Island.— The company
rescued and carried to France.— De Monts made viceroy of New France.— Departs with
a colony.— Reaches the Bay of Fundy.— Port Royal founded by Poutrincourt, and the
St. Croix settlement by De Monts.— The country named Acadia.— Champlain receives
a commission.— Sails with a colony to the St. Lawrence.— Goes against the Iroquois.—
Returns and founds Quebec 70-76
CHAPTER VI.
ENGLISH DISCOVERIES AND SETTLEMENTS.
Henry VII. commissions John Cabot.— Who discovers North America.— Is re-
oommissioned.— Sebastian takes charge of the expedition.— Explores the American
coast from Labrador to Cape Hatteras.— Leaves England to become pilot of Spain—
The notable year 1498.— Causes which impeded English discovery.— Maritime enter-
prise revives under Elizabeth.— Frobisher sails to America and discovers Meta Incog-
nita.—Takes spurious ore to London.— A new voyage is planned.— Frobisher conducts
a fleet to Meta Incognita.— The expedition proves a failure.— Sir Francis Drake cap-
tures Spanish merchantmen.— Goes to the Pacific coast.— Attempts the disco verv of a
north-west passage.— Gilbert forms a plan of colonization.— Is assisted bv Raleigh.—
Conducts a fleet to Newfoundland.- -The crews find spurious minerals.— flie voyage is
continued to Massachu.setts.— Gilbert loses his best ship and a hundred men.— .Smarts
home, and is lost at sea —Raleigh sends Amidas and Barlow with a colony.— They
reach Roanoke Island and begin a settlement.— The place is abandoned.— Ralei<^h
sends a second colony under Lane.— The colonists reach Roanoke and begin to build —
Difliculties arise with tlie Indians.-The settlement is broken up.-The colony taken
home by Drake.-A new charter granted by Raleigh, and White chosen governor -
The new emigrants arrive at Roanoke.-The foundationsof a town laid on the Island —
Troubk-s with the Tndians.-Manteo is made a peer.- White returns to England.-Birth
of Virgmia Dare.-The fate of the colony never ascertained.-Condition of afiairs in
England.-White returns, and finds Roanoke deserted .-Raleigh assigns his patent to
^jjj CONTENTS.
London merchants.— Gosnold makes a voyage directly across the Atlantic— Attempt!
to form a settlement on Elizabeth Island.— The place is abandoned.— Gosnold trades
with the natives. — The crew demand to return. — Flattering accounts are given of the
country.— An expedition is sent out under Pring.— He explores a part of the New
En"land coast, and returns to Bristol.— Waymouth sails on a voyage.— Trades with
the Indians of Maine.— Returns to England 76-85.
CHAPTER VII.
ENGLISH DISCOVEKIES AND SETTLEMENTS. — CONTINUED.
Kin"^ James issues patents to the London and Plymouth Companies. — The London
Company to plant colonies between the 34th and the 38th parallels. — The Plymouth Com-
pany to make settlements from the 41st to the 45th degree. — Gosnold, Smith, Hakluyt
and Wingfield lead the afl'airs of the Southern Company. — No democratic principles
are recognized in the charter. — A ship is sent out by the Plymouth Company. — A
second vessel is dispatched to America. — A settlement is attempted at the mouth of the
Kennebec. — Is abandoned in the summer of 1608. — A fleet with a colony is sent out by
the London Company. — Newport commands. — They arrive in the Chesapeake. — Enter
James River. — Make a landing and lay the foundations of Jamestown. — The affairs of
the Plymouth Company are revived by Smith. — He explores and maps the coast of
Maine and Massachusetts. — Several attempts are made to form a colony in New Eng-
land— The Plymouth Company is superseded by the Council of Plymouth. — A new
plan of colonization is made, and Smith appointed admiral. — The Puritans arise in the
North of England. — They remove to Amsterdam and Leyden. — Determine to remove to
America. — Ask permission of the king and the Council of Plymouth. — Meet with di8«
couragements. — Procure two vessels at their own expense. — Sail from Leyden, and after-
ward from Southampton. — The Speedwell is found unfit for the voyage, and the Pilgrims
de})art in the Mayflower. — The Pilgrims have a stormy voyage. — Come in sight of Cape
Cod. — They make a frame of government. — Carver is elected governor. — The landing
is delayed by bad weather. — The ship is driven by storms. — Enters Plymouth harbor. —
The Puritans go asliore on the 11th of December. — Begin to build. — Are attacked with
diseases. — Many of the colony die. — An early spring brings them relief. . 85-91.
CHAPTER VIII.
VOYAGES AW© SETTLEMENTS OF THE DUTCH.
Dutch settlements in America result from the voyages of Hudson. — He is employed
by London merchants to reach the Indies. — Sails into the North Atlantic. — Fails in his
eflort. — Is sent on a second voyage. — And fails. — Goes into the service of the Dutch East
India Company. — Sails on a third voyage. — Is driven back by the icebergs. — Turns to
America. — Reaches Newfoundland. — Sails southward to the Chesapeake. — Then north-
ward to New York harbor. — Discovers the Hudson River. — Explores that stream as far
as .Vlbany. — Returns to Dartmouth. — Is detained by the Englisii government. — Is .sent on
a fourth expedition. — Discovers Hud.son Strait and Bay. — Is overtaken by winter. — The
crew mutiny. — Hudson is cast off among the icebergs. — Dutch vessels begin to trade at
the mouth of the Hudson. — The states-general grant a right to trade. — A settlement is
made on Manhattan Island. — Block explores Lonr Island Sound. — Christianson builds
Fort Nassau. — May explores the coast of New Jersey. — Holland claims the country
from Delaware Bay to Cape Cod 92-94
CONTENTS. ix
PART III.
COLONIAL HISTORY.
A. 1>. 1607— 1775.
PARENT COLONIES.
CHAPTEK IX.
VIRGINIA. — THE FIRST CHARTER.
The progress of Virginia is hindered. — First settlers are of bad character. — Necessity
drives them to labor. — The king gives sealed instructions. — Smith is arrested. — And ex-
cluded from the council.— He and Newport explore the James. — Eeturn to Jamestown.
— Newport goes to England. — The colonists are discouraged. — Disease ravages the settle-
ment.— Gosnold dies. — Wingfield embezzles the funds. — And is removed from office.—
Eatcliffe succeeds.— And is also impeached.— Smith takes control of the colony. — Sketch
of his life. — The settlement flourishes under his care. — He explores the country, and pro-
cures supplies.— The Indians furnish provisions.— Smith explores the Chickahominy.—
Is captured by the Indians.— Saves his life by stratagem.— Is carried to Orapax.— Thence
to Pamunkey. — Is condemned to death. — And saved by Pocahontas. — He remains in
Powhatan's household.— Is liberated.— Returns to Jamestown.— Terrifies tlie savages.—
Deplorable condition of the settlement.— Plot to abandon the place.— Newport arrives
•with new immigrants. — Who are as bad as the others. — The gold-hunters go abroad.—
And find mica in the sand of James Eiver. — A ship is loaded with dirt and sent to Eng-
land.—The planting season goes by.— Smith makes his great exploration of the Chesa-
peake.—And maps the country. — Returns. — Is elected president. — Newport arrives with
more immigrants and supplies. — Progress of the colony 9.>-104.
CHAPTER X.
VIRGINIA. — THE SECOND CHARTER.
King James grants a new charter. — Changes are made in the form of government. — A
new council is organized. — Delaware is chosen governor. — The other officers. — A fleet
with five hundred emigrants sails for America. — Encounters a storm. — Two vessels are
wrecked. — Seven ships reach Jamestown. — The commissioners are left on the Bermuda
Islands. — Smith retains the presidency. — New settlements are projected. — Smith is
wounded.— Delegates his authority to Percy.— Returns to England.— Colony suflfers after
his departure. — The starving time. — Gates and liis companions reacli Virginia. — The
settlement is abandoned. — Delaware meets the colony. — And persuades them to return.—
Prosperity begins.— But Delaware falls sick. — And returns to England.— Percy is deputy.
— Dale arrives as governor. — Brings immigrants. — Writes for supplies and new colo-
nist-s. — Who arrive. — TI>e colony improves. — Gates is made governor. — The right of
private property i.s recognized. — .\nd the settlements enlarged. . . . 104-107
^ CONTENTS.
CHAPTER XL
VIRGINIA. — THE THIKD CHARTER.
The London Company receive a third patent. — The colony had proved unprofitable.
— Afali kidnaps Pocahontas. — Who is married to Rolfe. — They visit England.— And
leave descendants in Virginia. — Argall destroys the French settlements in Acadia. —
And reduces the Dutch colony of Manhattan.— Dale becomes governor of Virginia.—
Tobacco is the staple of Jamestown.— And is used for money.— Argall is chosen gov-
ernor.-Delaware sails for America.— And dies.— Yeardley supersedes Argall.— Abolishes
martial law.— Establislies the House of Burgesses.— Slavery is introduced.— Society is
low_ Women are sent over. — .\nd married to the colonists. — A constitution is granted.
"Wvatt liecomes governor. — Settlements spread abroad. — The Indians become jealous.
—And massacre the people.— But are defeated.— The company is opposed by the king.—
A commission is appointed.— Who report against the company. — And its charter is re-
voked.—But liberty is planted in Virginia 108-113
CHAPTER XII.
VIRGINIA. — THE ROYAL GOVERNMENT.
Roval government Is established. — But the administration is unchanged. — Charles I.
becomes king.— Recognizes tlie Virginia Assembly. — Yeardley is re-elected governor. —
Dies. — West is chosen by the council. — Harvey arrives from England. — Land-grants vex
the people. — Harvey is impeached. — But is sustained by the king. — Wyatt succeeds. —
English Revolution breaks out. — King Charles is beheaded. — Monarchy is abolished. —
Cromwell becomes Protector.— Virginia inclines to royalty.— Berkeley becomes gov-
ernor.— The Puritans are persecuted. — An Indian war arises. — The savages are beaten.
— Virginia refuses to acknowledge Parliament. — Cromwell restricts her commerce. —
Sends a fleet to America. — And the Virginians submit. — Favorable terms are granted
— Peace continues during the commonwealth. — The Burgesses elect three governors.^
Berkeley is thus chosen, — Accepts. — But at the Restoration renounces his acceptance,
— And issues writs in the king's name. — Tyranny follows. — Commerce is restricted. —
The Virginians complain. — In vain. — Charles II. gives away Virginia lands. — And
finally the whole State to Arlington and Culpepper. — The Quakers and the Baptists are
persecuted. — Taxes are odious.— The people rebel, — An Indian war is the excuse. —
And Berkeley's tyranny the cause. — Bacon heads the insurrection. — The Indians are
punished. — Berkeley abdicates. — Returns. — Captures Jamestown. — Bacon takes the
place, and burns it. — Dies. — The patriots are dispersed. — And the leaders hanged. —
A worse despotism is established. — Culpepper becomes governor. — Treats Virginia as
an estate. — .-Vrlington surrenders his claim. — The king recalls the grant. — And Vir-
ginia becomes a royal province. — Howard and Nicholson administer the government. —
William and Mary College founded. — Andros becomes governor. — Future history of Vir-
rinia. .... ......... 114-123
CHAPTER XIII,
.MASSACHUSETTS. — SETTLEMENT.
The Pilgrims are saved by the coming of hpring. — Health is restored, — Miles Stan-
dish is sent out to reconnoitre. — Samoset and Squanto come to Plymouth. — A treaty is
made with Ma.ssasoit. — Other tribes acknowledge the sovereignty of England. — Canon-
icns is overawed. — .\n unfruitful summer. — Iiumigrants arive. — Are quartered on the
colony. — Tlic Pilgrims are destitute. — The new-comers found W^ey mouth, — The Indi-
CONTENTS. xi
ans plan a massacre. — And arc punished by Standish. — Weymouth is abandoned. — A
plentiful harvest. — Robinson remains at Leyden. — The colonial enterprise proves un-
profitable.— The managers sell out to the colonists. — The Established Church is fa-
vored.— Salem is founded. — The Company of Massachusetts Bay is chartered by the
king and the council. — Boston is founded. — The government is transferred to America.
— A large immigration in 1630. — Wintlirop is governor. — Cambridge is founded. —
Watertown. — Roibury. — Dorchester. — The colony suffers greatly. — Suffrage is restricted.
— Williams protests. — And is banished. — Goes among the Indians. — Is kindly received.
— Tarries at Seekonk. — Removes. — And founds Providence. — A representative govern-
ment is established. — The ballot-box is introduced. — Tliree thousand immigrants ar-
rive.— Vane and Peters are the leaders. — Concord is founded. — Colonies remove to the
Connecticut. — Religious controversies. — Mrs. Hutchinson is banished. — She and her
friends establish a republic on Rl)ode Island. — Harvard College is founded at Cam-
bridge.— A printing-press is set up. — Eliot, Welde, and Mather translate the Psalms. —
Liberty flourishes in Massachusetts. — Emigration is hindered by England. 123-133.
CHAPTER XIV.
MASSACHUSETTS. — THE UNION.
Progress of New England. — Circumstances favor a union of the colonies. — Massa-
cliusetts, Plymouth, Connecticut and New Haven are confederated. — No other colonies
are admitted. — A Body of Liberties is formed. — The two legislative branches are sepa-
rated.— Tlie English Revolution is favorable to New England. — Vane and others de-
fend the rights of the colonies. — The Parliament demands the charter of Massachusetts.
— Which is refused. — Cromwell the friend of Massachusetts. — Maine is annexed.—
Early settlements in Maine. — The Quakers arrive at Boston. — Are persecuted and baii-
i.shed. — The death-penalty is passed against them. — Four persons are executed. — Reac-
tion against the law. — And the law is abolished. — News of the Restoration reaches
Boston. — Whalley and Goffe arrive. — And escape to Connecticut. — Vane and Peters are
executed. — The Navigation Act is passed. — Its bearing on the commerce of New Eng-
land.— War between England and Holland. — Charles II. attempts to subvert the colo-
nial charters. — Commissioners are sent to Massachusetts. — Are met with resistance. —
And defeated in their objects. — The colony prospers. .... 133-139.
CHAPTER XV.
MASSACHUSETTS. — KING PHILIP'S WAR.
Philip becomes king of the Wampanoags. — Causes of jealousy and war. — Alexan-
der's imprisonment. — Outrages are committed. — The war begins. — Swanzey is attacked.
— Philip is pursued to Mount Hope. — Escapes to Tiverton. — Is driven from the Narra-
gansett country. — Goes to the Nipmucks. — A general war ensues. — The Narragansetts
are obliged to remain neutral. — English ambassadors are massacred at Brookfield. — The
town is attacked. — Rescued. — Abandoned. — Burned. — Deerfield is partly destroyed. —
Lathrop attempts to bring off the harvests. — Is ambushed at Bloody Brook. — The battle.
— Hadley is attacked. — Rescued by Goffe. — Springfield is assaulted. — And destroyed.
— Hadley is burned. — The savages are defeated at Hatfield. — Philip repairs to the Nar-
ragansetts.— The English declare war. — And invade the country. — Philip and his forces
take refuge in a swamp. — Are surrounded. — Attacked. — And utterly routed.— Ruin of
the Narragansett nation. — The war continues on the frontiers. — Towns and villages are
destroyed. — The savages grow feeble. — Canonchet is taken. — And put to death. — Philip's
family are captured. — And sold as slaves. — Himself hunted down. — And shot. — Sub-
Xll
CONTENTS.
mission of the tribes.— Losses of New England.— The English government refuses help.
— Randolph conies to abridge the liberties of Massachusetts. — And is defeated. — Mas-
Bachusetts pnrchast-s Maine of llie heirs of Gorges. — Difficulties concerning New llamp-
shire — A royal government is established in the province. — Cranfield's administration,
— The king's hostility. — The charter of Massachusetts is annulled. — King Charles dies.
— James 11. appoints Dudley governor. — And then Andros. -The liberties of the peo-
ple are destroyed. — The government of Andros is extended over New England. — But
tlie charter of Connecticut is saved. — The Eevolution of 1688. — Andros is seized, and
; imprisoned. — And the colonies restore their liberties, .... 139-147.
CHAPTER XVI.
MASSACHTJSETTS. — WAR AND WITCHCRAFT.
King William's War begins. — The causes, — Dover is attacked and burned. — Pema-
quid is destroyed. — And then Schenectady. — And Salmon Falls. — An expedition is
planned against Canada. — Phipps takes Port Royal. — But fails at Quebec. — And re-
turns.— Paper money is issued. — Failure of the expedition against Montreal. — Phipps
goes to England. — And returns as royal governor. — Oyster River is destroyed. — Haver-
hill is attacked and burned. — Mrs. Dustin's captivity. — The treaty of Ryswick. — The
witchcraft excitement begins at Salem. — The causes. — Parris and Mather. — The trials.
— Convictions.— Executions. — The reaction, — Mather's book, — Reflections. 147-153.
CHAPTER XVII,
MASSACHTJSETTS. — WARS OF ANNE AND GEORGE,
Causes of Queen Anne's War, — Field of operations in America, — A treaty is made
with the Five Nations, — The conflict begins. — Deerfield is burned. — And the inhab-
itants carried captive to Canada, — Barbarities of the Indians. — An expedition is sent
against Port Royal. — The attempt fail.s. — Is renewed in 1710. — Port Royal is taken. —
And named Annapolis. — Preparations are made for invading Canada. — Nicholson com-
mands the land forces. — And Walker the fleet. — The squadron is delayed, — Stops at
Gasp6 Bay. — Is shattered by a storm in the St. Lawrence. — Returns in disgrace, — The
expedition by land is abandoned. — A treaty is made at Utrecht. — A separate peace is
concluded with the Indians. — The people of Massachusetts resist the royal governor,
— Causes of King George's War. — The conflict begins. — Importance of Louisburg. — Its
conquest is planned by Shirley. — The colonies contribute men and means. — The expe-
dition leaves Boston. — Is detained at Canseau, — Joined by Warren's fleet, — Reaches
Gabarus Bay. — Invests Louisburg. — The siege. — The surrender. — Cape Breton siibmits.
— France attempts to retio'nquer Louisburg. — Treat}' of Aix-la-Chapelle. — Character of
the Puritans 153-160.
CHAPTER XVIII,
NEW YORK. — SETTLEMENT.
Character of Sir Henry Hudson. — The East India Company govern Manhattan. — A
colony is sent from Holland. — A charter is granted to the West India Company, — The
Walloons arrive at New Am.sterdam, — May builds Fort Nassau, — And Joris, Fort
Orange.— Civil government begins in New Netherland. — May is governor, — And then
VeriiulBt.— And Minuit. — Manhattan is purchased. — And fortified.— Friendly relations
are established between the Walloons and the Puritan.s.— The Dutch devote themselves
to the fur-trade. — Growth of the colony. — A charter is granted. — The patroons, — Five
manors are laid out. — Delaware is colonized. — And then abandoned. — Van Twiller sue-
CONTENTS. xiii
ceeds Minuit. — A fort is built at Hartford. — The English claim the Connecticut. — Swe-
den purposes to plant an American colony. — The project is delayed. — But renewed by
Minuit. — A Swedish colony reaches the Delaware. — Settles at Christiana. — Is prosper-
ous.— And New Netherland is jealous. — Fort Nassau is rebuilt. — Printz removes to Tin-
icum. — The Indians are provoked by the Dutcli. — War breaks out. — A desultory contest.
— The Mohawks come. — Kieft massacres the Algonquius. — The war continues. — Fate of
Mrs. Hutcliinson. — Underbill conquers the Indians. — Kieft the author of the war. —
DeVries succeeds him. 160-167.
CHAPTER XIX.
NEW YORK. — ADMINISTRATION OF STUYVESANT.
Stuyvesant is appointed governor. — Peace established with the Indians. — Free trade
succeeds monopoly. — Growth of the colony. — A boundary is established between New
England and New Netherland. — The Dutch again claim New Sweden. — Build Fort
Casimir. — The place is captured by the Swedes. — Stuyvesant conquers and annexes New
Sweden. — The Algonquins rebel. — And are subdued. — The Indians of Ulster rise. —
Burn Esopus. — Are punished. — Stuyvesant is troubled about his boundaries. — Domes-
tic difficulties. — New Netherland lags. — The Dutch prefer English laws. — The province
is granted to the Duke of York. — The duke makes good his claim. — Sends out Nicolls.
-^And conquers New Netherland. 167-171.
CHAPTEE XX.
NEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH.
Nicolls settles the boundaries of New York. — New Jersey is granted to Berkeley
and Carteret. — Is claimed by Nicolls. — But the claim is set aside. — The Territories. —
The Dutch claim liberty. — Are disappointed. — New land-titles are issued. — Lovelace
succeeds Nicolls. — And is resisted by the people. — His tyranny. — Friendship of the
English and the Dutch. — War with Holland. — Evertsen reconquers New York. — But
the province is restored to England. — Andros begins his government. — Proves himself
a despot. — Claims the country from the Connecticut to Maryland. — Goes to Saybrook.
— Is baffled by Captain Bull. — Attempts to overawe New Jersey. — And fails. — Delaware
is separated from New York. — And joined to Pennsylvania. — Dongan becomes gov-
ernor.— The right of representation is conceded. — Character of the Constitution. — A
treaty is made with the Iroquois. — The Duke of York becomes king. — And overthrows
colonial liberties. — Andros is sent out as governor of New England. — Usurps the gov-
ernments of all the colonies north of the Delaware. — Leisler's insurrection. — The prov-
ince yields to his authority. — Schenectady is burned. — Ingoldsby arrives as governor.
— Leisler and Milborne are arrested.— Tried. — And hanged. — The Iroquois treaty is
renewed. — The Indians make war on the French. — The assembly declares against ar-
bitrary authority. — Fletcher becomes governor. — Attempts to usurp the government
of Connecticut and New Jersey.— Is defeated.— Effort to establish the Episcopal
Church.— The project fails.— The French invade New York.— Are repelled. — Bello-
mont becomes governor. — The career of Captain Kidd. — Cornbury succeeds Bellomont.
— New Jersey is annexed to New York. — Cornbury's fraudulent administration. — He
is overthrown. — And succeeded by Lovelace. — An unsuccessful expedition is made
against Montreal.— The fleet also fails.— New York is in debt.— The treaty of Utrecht.
—The Tuscarora migration.— A fort is built at Oswego.— The French fortify Niagara
and Crown Point. — Crosby is sent out as governor. — Assails the freedom of the press.
— The trial of Zenger. — The negro plot. — French invasions of New York. — Treaty of
Aix-la-Chapelle. — Slow growth of the province. — Prospects. — Reflections. . 172-1S3.
XIV CONTENTS.
COLONIAL HISTORY.— Continued.
MINOR EASTERN COLONIES.
CHAPTER XXI.
CONNECTICUT.
Connecticut is granted to Warwick. — And transferred to Sav-and-Seal. — The Dutch
fortifj Hartford. — The Puritans claim the country. — Send an expedition up the Con-
necticut.— Found Windsor. — A colony leaves Boston. — Settles on the Connecticut. —
Winthrop founds Saybrook. — The English control the river. — The Pequod War. — The
Narragansetts make a treaty with the English. — The Pequods do likewise. — Violate the
compact. — Attempt an alliance with the Narragansetts. — Williams defeats the project.
— The Mohegans join the English. — A massacre at Wethersfield. — Mason is chosen to
command. — A force is organized. — Proceeds against the Pequods. — And destroys the
nation. — The coast of Long Island Sound is explored. — New Haven is founded. — The
Bible for a constitution. — Civil government begins in Connecticut. — Character of the
laws. — Connecticut joins the Union. — Saybrook is annexed. — A treaty is made with
Stuyvesant. — War with New Netherland is threatened. — King Charles is recognized.
— Winthrop is sent to England. — Obtains a charter. — Returns. — Is chosen governor. —
Growth of the colony. — Andros attempts to assume the government. — Is thwarted at Say-
brook.— Returns after twelve years. — Invades the assembly at Hartford. — Subverts the
government. — The charter is saved. — Fletcher enters the colony. — Is baffled by Wads-
worth. — Yale College is founded. — Development of the province. — Reflections. 184-192.
CHAPTER XXII.
KHODE ISLAND.
Williams founds Rhode Island.— Sketch of his life.— The Baptist Church is or-
ganized.— Civil government begins. — Character of the institutions. — Massachusetts re-
fuses to recall Williams from exile. — A colony at Portsmouth. — The Jewish common-
wealth.— Newport is founded. — The Norse tower. — A democracy is established. — Rhode
Island is rejected by the Union. — Williams procures a charter. — The island of Rhode
Island secedes. — Is reannexed. — Patriotism of Williams. — Charles II. reissues the
charter. — Prosperity of Rhode Island. — .\ndros overturns the government. — Is over-
thrown.—Henry Bull is governor.— Reflections 193-198.
CHAPTER XXIII.
NEW HAMPSHIKE.
New Hampshire is granted to Gorges and Mason. — And colonized. — Settlements
on the Piscataqua. — The province is divided. — Wheelwright purchases the Indian
title.— Mason's patent is conflrmed. — He dies. — Difficulties ensue. — Exeter is founded.
— New Hampshire is united with Massachusetts. — The Masonian claim is revived. —
The question is decided. — The two provinces are separated. — Cranfield is appointed
governor. — A general assembly is convened. — Character of the laws. — The royal officers
CONTENTS. xy^
are resisted. — Andros assumes the government. — New Hampshire and Massachusetts
are united. — Governed by Bellomont. — Finally separated. — The Masonian claim again.
How decided. — Suffering of the colony in the Indian wars. — Character of the people.
— Eeflections on the New England colonists. 198-202.
COLONIAL HISTORY.— Continued.
MINOR MIDDLE COLONIES.
CHAPTER XXIV.
NEW JERSEY.
Early settlements in New Jersey.— At Bergen.— And Fort Nassau.— Grants and
purchases. — The province is given to Berkeley and Carteret. — Nicolls makes a grant to
Puritans. — Elizabethtown is founded. — Nicolls contends with the Carterets. — The pro-
prietors frame a constitution. — Character of the laws. — The quit-rents. — The colonists
resist payment. — Philip Carteret is deposed. — And James Carteret becomes governor. —
New Jersey is retaken by Holland. — And again ceded to England. — The Duke of York
has his charter renewed. — Andros comes as governor. — Carteret resists. — Berkeley .sells
AVest Jersey to Fen wick. — Philip Carteret and Andros dispute about the Eastern prov-
ince.— Laurie, Lucas, and Penn buy West Jersey. — Object of the j)urchase. — New Jersey
is divided. — Line of division. The proprietors of West Jersey issue the Concessions. —
The Quakers colonize West Jersey. — The Duke of York claims the country. — Sir Wil-
liam Jones decides against him. — Andros's claim to East Jersey is annulled. — The Qua-
Icers convene an assembly. — And frame a constitution. — East Jersey is purcha-sed by the
Friends. — Barclay is governor. — The two Jerseys submit to Andros. — And afterward
regain their liberties. — Conflicting claims to the country. — Discord. — The proprietors-
surrender their rights of government to the Crown. — New Jersey becomes a royal
province. — Is attached to New York under Cornbury. — The people petition for a sepa-
ration.— Which is granted. — Morris becomes governor. — New Jersey not injured by
Indian wars. — Eeflections 203-208.
CHAPTER XXV.
PENNSYLVANIA.
The Friends are persecuted in Europe. — Penn designs to plant a Quaker State in
America. — Charles II. grants the charter of Pennsylvania. — Penn relinquishes his
■claims on the British government. — Declares his purposes. — Writes a letter to the
Swedes. — Invites emigration. — A colony departs under Markham. — The Indians are
assured of friendship. — Penn frames a constitution. — The Duke of York surrenders
Delaware. — Extent of Penn's dominion. — He leaves England with a second colony. —
Sketch of his life. — He addresses the people at New Castle. — Passes through the
Jerseys to New York.— Returns. — Makes the great treaty with the Indians. — Which is
kept inviolate. — A convention is held at Chester. — A provisional constitution is
adopted. — Penn visits Lord Baltimore. — Philadelphia is founded. — Growth of the
xvi CONTENTS.
city. — Penn sails for England. — Lloyd remains as governor. — Delaware secedes. — Penn
adheres to the Stuarts. — Is imprisoned. — His province is taken away. — But afterward
restored. — Penn revisits America. — The constitution is modified. — Delaware is finally
separated. — Penn returns to England. — Condition of his province. — Hamilton and Evans
deputy governors. — Conduct of the latter. — He is removed from office. — Succeeded by
Gookin. — Penn's trials in England. — He dies. — His sons become proprietors of Penn-
sylvania.— The province is purchased by the colonial assembly. — Reflections. 209-215,
COLONIAL HISTORY— Continued.
MINOR SO UTHERN COLONIES.
CHAPTER XXVI.
MARYLAND. "
CLiyborne is commissioned by the London Company. — Explores the Chesapeake.—
Establishes trading-posts. — Sketcli of Sir George Calvert's life. — He plans a Catholic
colony. — Sends a company to Newfoundland. — Goes to Virginia. — Refuses the oath. —
Returns to England. — Obtains a charter. — Character and extent of the patent. — Calvert
dies. — Sir Cecil succeeds him. — The name of Maryland. — A colony is sent out under
Leonard Calvert. — Reaches tlie Chesapeake. — Ascends the Potomac. — Returns. — And
founds St. Mary's. — Friendly relations are established with the Indians. — Growth of
the colony. — An assembly is convened. — Clayborne incites an insurrection. — Is beaten.
— Escapes into Virginia. — Is sent to England. — Representative government is estab-
lished.— An Indian war breaks out. — Clayborne returns to America. — Leads a second
insurrection. — Overthrows the government. — The rebellion is suppressed.— Tolerant
character of the laws. — Division of the legislature. — Commissioners are appointed by
Parliament.— Dissensions of Stone and Clayborne.— The civil war between the Catliolics
and Protestants.— Fendall's rebellion. — Maryland declares intlependence.— Feiidall is
condemned.— Charles Calvert is governor.— The Protestants gain control of the State.
— Maryland becomes a royal province. — The heir of i^ord Baltimore is restored to his
rights.— The Cal verts rule the colony until the Revolution.— Reflections. . 216-224.
CHAPTER XXVII.
NORTH CAROLINA.
The name of Carolina.— Early explorations.— The country is granted to Clarendon
and others.— Albemarle and Clarendon colonies are founded.— Cooper and Locke
frame the grand model.— Its establishment impossible.— Clarendon county is aban-
doned.—The proprietors oppress the colonists.- A rebellion ensues. — Governor CuL
pepper goes to England. — And defends the people. — Clarendon sells his rights. — Sothel
is sent out as governor. — His tyranny. — He is overthrown. — Ludwell succeeds. — And
then Walker. — The colony prospers. — Decline of the Indian tribes. — A war breaks out.
— Barnwell's expedition. — Peace. — And war again. — Moore invades the country of the
Tuscaroras.— The savages are beaten. — The nation is divided. — Tlie Tuscarora migra-
tion.— Division of the Carolinas. — Character of the people. . . . 224-229.
CONTENTS. xxvii
New York. — Discussion of the tariff in Congress. — A protective duty laid on fabrics.
A new departure in American history. — Adams renominated for the Presidency. — Gen-
eral Jackson put forward by the Democrats. — And elected. . . , 423-426.
CHAPTER LIV.
Jackson's administration.
Sketch of Jackson's life and character. — He fills the oflSces with his political
friends —Opposes the rechartering of the United States Bank. — And vetoes the bill. —
The new political organization. — Sketch of parties. — The tariff question again. — South
Carolina attempts nullification. — Debate of Webster and Hayne. — The President's proc-
lamation.— South Carolina recedes from her position. — Mr. Clay's tariff compromise. —
The Black Hawk war breaks out. — Generals Scott and Atkinson are sent against the
Eed men. — Who are driven to submission. — The difficulty with the Cherokees. — Char-
acter of that race.— The wrongs done to them. — Scott compels their removal to the
West. — A second Seminole war. — The arrest of Osceola. — His release and conspiracy. —
Dade's massacre. — Murder of General Thompson. — Clinch fights the savages and re-
treats.— Gaines defeats the Indians on the Withlacoochie. — Battle of the Wahoo Swamp.
— A second fight. — The President orders the distribution of the funds. — A panic follows.
— The President is vituperated. — Is censured by Congress. — But re-elected. — He brings
France and Portugal to terms. — Death-list of eminent men. — Fires in New York and
Washington. — Arkansas and Michigan admitted into the Union. — Jackson's farewell
address. — Van Buren elected President 426-436.
CHAPTER LV.
VAN bueen's administration.
Sketch of the new executive. — Another monetary disturbance. — Continuance of the
Seminole war. — Colonel Taylor hunts the savages to Lake Okeechobee. — Defeats them,
— And compels submission. — The financial panic of '37. — Causes which led thereto. —
Especially the Specie Circular. — The banks suspend. — Tremendous failures. — Treasury
notes are issued. — The Independent Treasury Bill is discussed. — And finally passed. —
Partial revival of business. — The Canada insurrection. — Affair of the Caroline. — Wool is
sent to the Niagara. — Order- is restored. — An early presidential canvass. — Uneventful
character of Van Buren's administration. — The sixth census. — General Harrison is
elected President 436-440
CHAPTER LVI.
administrations of HARRISON AND TYLER.
Sketch of the President's life. — He enters upon his duties. — Falls sick. — And dies.
— Tyler succeeds to the Presidency. — Sketch. — Repeal of the Independent Treasury
Bill. — A bill is passed to recharter the United States Bank. — And vetoed by the Presi-
dent.— The bankrupt law. — Rupture between the executive and Congress. — Resignation
of the cabinet.-rThe north-eastern boundary is settled by the Webster-Ashburton treaty.
— The Rhode Island insurrection. — The suffrage party elects Dorr. — And the law-and-
order party, King. — The latter is supported by the government. — Dorr's followers are
scattered. — And himself convicted of treason. — But afterward pardoned. — Building and
dedication of Bunker Hill monument. — The Van Rensselaer land troubles in New
York. — The Mormons. — They are driven from Missouri. — Found Nauvoo. — Popular
feeling against them. — Smith and his brother are murdered. — And the Mormons driven
xviii CONTENTS.
of the Jesuits. — Missions are established on the lakes. — Joliet and Marquette discover the
Mississippi. — Descend the river. — Keturii to Micliigan. — La Salle passes through the
lakes. — Descends the Illinois. — Goes to Canada. — Returns. — And explores the Missis-
sippi to tiie guli'. — Sails for France. — Returns with a colony. — Reaches Texas. — Seta
out for Canada. — Is murdered. — French posts are established. — The Ohio valley to be
occupied. — The animosity of France and England leads to war. — The frontiersmen of
the two nations come in conflict. — The Ohio Company is organized. — Obtains a grant
ot land. — Bienville explores and claims the Ohio valley. — Gist traverses the country to
the falls of the Ohio. — The French fortify Le Bceuf and Venango. — Attack a British
post. — Gist makes a second exploration.— An English colony on the Youghiogheny. —
The Indians favor the English. — The Half-King goes to Erie. — The chiefs confer with
Franklin. — Dinwiddle sends a despatch to St. Pierre. — Washington is chosen for the
mission. — Sets out by way of Will's Creek to the site of Pittsburg, — And thence to Le
Bo^f. — Washington confers with St. Pierre. — And returns to Virginia. — Hardships
of the journey. — Trent begins a fort at the fork of the Ohio. — The French capture the
place. — And build Du Quesne. — Washington is sent to retake the fort. . 245-255.
CHAPTER XXXI.
CAMPAIGNS OP WASHINGTON AND BRADDOCK.
Washington marches to Great Meadows. — Builds Fort Necessity. — Attacks and
defeats Jumonville. — Extends the road toward Du Quesne. — De Villiers approaches. —
Attacks Fort Necessity. — And compels a surrender. — An American congress assembles
at Albany. — Franklin plans a union. — The colonies reject the constitution. — France
sends soldiers to America. — Braddock is sent by England. — He confers with the gov-
ernors.— Plans four compaigns. — Marches his army to Foi't Cumberland. — Proceeds
against Du Quesne. — Approaches the fort. — Meets the French and Indians. — And is v
terribly defeated. — Washington saves the remnant of the army. — Death of Braddock.
— Dunbar retreats. — Destroys the stores. — Evacuates Fort Cumberland. — Retires to
Philadelphia 25-5-261.
CHAPTER XXXIL
BUIN OF ACADIA.
Nova Scotia under English rule. — Lawrence fears an insurrection. — Is authorized
to subdue the French inhabitants. — The English fleet leaves Boston. — The French
forts on the Bay of Fundy. — The fleet arrives at Beau-Sejour. — The place is besieged.
— And obliged to surrender. — The other forts capitulate. — The British officers deter-
mine to exile the inhabitants. — The country is laid waste. — And the people carried into
banishment 261-264.
CHAPTER XXXIIL
EXPEDITIONS OF SHIRLEY AND JOHNSON.
A campaign is planned against Niagara. — Shirley commands. — Proceeds to Os-
wego.— Wastes the time. — Marches homeward.— Oswego Is rebuilt. — Johnson and Ly-
man go against the French on Lake Champlain.— Build Fort Edward.— Form a camp
on Lake George. — Dieskau approaches. — Proceeds by way of Wood Creek against Fort
Edward. — Meets the English. — And drives them to the camp. — Tlie battle. — The
French are defeated. — Dieskau is killed. — The English lose heavily. — Johnson builds
Fort William Henry. — The French reinforce their forts 264-266.
CONTENTS. xix
CHAPTER XXXIV.
TWO YEAK8 OP DISASTER.
Shirley becomes commander-in-chief. — Washington repels the Indians. — Franklin
<lefends Pennsylvania. — The campaigns of 1756 are planned. — The military forces of
America are consolidated. — Loudoun is commander-in-chief. — He and Abercrombie
arrive in New York with soldiers and supplies. — England declares war. — Abercrombie
goes to Albany. — And stays there. — Montcalm besieges and captures Oswego. — The
Delawares revolt. — And are punished. — Loudoun burrows at Albany. — The French
strengthen their forts. — The conquest of Louisburg is planned. — Loudoun proceeds to
Halifax. — Holboiirn joins him. — They muster and do nothing. — Loudoun returns to
New York. — Montcalm and the Iroquois besiege and capture Fort William Henry. —
The Indians massacre the prisoners. — Review of the situation. 267-270.
CHAPTER XXXV.
TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSES.
Pitt becomes prime minister. — London n is deposed. — Abercrombie succeeds. — An
able corps of generals sent to America. — Three- campaigns are planned. — Amherst and
Wolfe proceed against Louisburg. — Besiege and take the fortress. — Abercrombie attacks
Ticonderoga. — And is repulsed with great loss. — Bradstreet takes Fort Frontenac. —
Montcalm advises peace. — Forbes marches against Du Quesne. — Grant is defeated. —
Washington leads the advance. — The French abandon and burn Du Quesne. — The
place named Pittsburg. — Amherst commander-in-chief. — Relative strength of the Eng-
lish and the French. — Pitt plans the conquest of Canada. — Prideaux defeats the French
before Niagara. — And captures the fortress. — Amherst takes Ticonderoga and Crown
Point. — Wolfe proceeds against Quebec. — Reaches the Island of Orleans. — Besieges the
city. — Tlie Lower Town is destroyed. — Montcalm's position. — The battle of Montmor-
enci. — Wolfe's fever. — He ascends the river. — Plans an assault. — Discover's Wolfe's
Cove. — Gains the Plains of Abraham. — Fights a decisive battle. — Defeats the French. —
Is slain. — Quebec capitulates. — And then Montreal. — The Cherokee revolt is quelled. —
The effect of the conquest of Canada. The French outposts are included in the sur-
render of Montreal. — Rogers is sent to take possession of the forts. — He reaches De-
troit.— Receives the surrender of Forts Miami and Ouatanow. — Mackinaw, Green Bay
and St. Marie afterward capitulate. — The English treat the Red men badly. — The lat-
ter become revengeful. — They make an attempt against Detroit. — And are baffled. —
Conspiracies grow rife. — Pontiac organizes a confederacy. — Makes a plot for the cap-
ture of Detroit. — And fails. — An unsuccessful siege ensues. — The savages are victorious
in other quarters. — They capture most of the western forts. — The confederacy breaks
up. — Pontiac is abandoned. — And killed. — The war continues on the ocean. — England
is victorious.— A treaty of peace.— The terms 270-279,
CHAPTER XXXVI.
CONDITION OF THE COLONIES.
The thirteen colonies.— Institutions. — Population. — Distribution of the same. —
Growth of a national character and sentiment.— Education. — Character of the same in
New England. — In the South.— Colleges. — Newspapers. — Books and men. — Absence of
roads. — Agriculture the predominating pursuit. — Sliip-building and manufactures.—
What the British Board of Trade was good for.— Reflections on the character of the
-A-nclo-American colonists. . ^ 280-284.
XX
CONTENTS.
PART IV.
REVOLUTION AND CONFEDERATION.
A. I>. 1775-1789.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
CAUSES.
Importance of the revolution. — The question decided by it. — Character of the con-
test.— The causes. — Great Britain claims the right of arbitrary government. — France
incites the rebellion. — The disposition of the Americans encourages independence. —
Public opinion leads to the same result. — The king provokes a conflict. — Parliament
passes oppressive acts. — The question of taxation. — Nature of the dispute. — The Im-
portation Act. — Its provisions. — Writs of Assistance are issued. — And resisted. — The
sugar and wine duties. — The colonists refuse to pay them. — A Stamp Act is proposed. —
Indignation in the colonies. — The question of the Indian war-debt arises. — The Stamp
Act is passed. — Its provisions. — The news is received in America. — Tlie wrath of the
people- — Scene in the House of Burgesses. — Patrick Henry's speech. — Passage of the
resolutions. — Other assemblies pursue a similar course. — Tiie first Colonial Congress. —
A declaration of Rights is adopted. — Memorials to the king and Parliament. — The
Stamp Act is resisted. — And the stamps destroyed. — Suspension of business. — The Sons
of Liberty. — A non-importation agreement is made. — The wrath of England.— Camden
and Pitt defend the colonists. — Repeal of the Stamp Act. — Joy follows. — Townshend re-
news the scheme. — Secures the passage of a glass and tea-tax. — The Americans resist
the act. — Circular of Massachusetts. — Seizure of a sloop at Boston. — Insurrection of the
people. — Gage takes possession of Boston. — Is ordered to arrest the patriots. — Rebellion
of Virginia and North Carolina. — Conflict at New York. — The Boston massacre. — Re-
peal of the duties. — Passage of the Salary Act. — Burning of the Ga.spee. — Stratagem
of the ministry. — Tea is shipped to America. — Is spoiled at Charleston. — Refused at
New York and Philadelphia. — And poured overboard at Boston. — Passage of the Port
Bill. — Opposition of the Burgesses. — The charter of Massachusetts is annulled. — The
people declared rebels. — The .second Congress assembles. — Resolutions and addresses.
— A British army is ordered to America. — Boston Neck fortified. — Military stores re-
moved.— The assembly refuses to disband. — War becomes inevitable. . 285-296.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
THE BEGINNING.
Tlie patriots remove their stores. — Gage plans to destroy them. — Pitcairn is sent for
that purpose. — Dawes and Revere arouse the people. — The British reach Lexington. —
Fire on the patriots. — Proceed to Concord. — Ransack the village. — Are attacked. — Anjl
driven back to Boston. — The country is fired. — The patriots gather at Cambridge. —
Allen and Arnold march against Ticonderoga. — .\nd capture the fortress. — The British
are reinforced. — Proclamation of Gage. — His plans. — The Americans fortify Breed's
Hill. — Amazement of the British. — The battle. — Excitement of the people. — The North
Carolinians declare independence. — The Colonial Congress assembles. — An appeal to
the king. — Washington commander-in-chief. — Sketch of his life. — His duties and em-
CONTENTS. xxi
barrassments.— Organization of the army.— Koyal rule is overthrown.— Struggle with
Dunmore.— Expedition against Quebec— Led by Schuyler, Montgomery and Arnold.—
4Schuyler falls sick.— Montgomery takes Montreal.— Hardships of Arnold's march.— He
and Montgomery unite against Quebec. — The town is invested. — The assault and defeat. —
Pall of Montgomery. — The expedition is abandoned. — Sketch of Montgomery. 297-305.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
THE WORK OF '76.
The king answers the colonies.— Howe succeeds Gage. — Siege of Boston. — The Brit-
ish evacuate the city. — The Americans enter.— Public rejoicings. — Washington goes to
]New York. — Clinton threatens the city. — Cornwallis and Parker proceed against
Charleston. — Eising of the Carolinians. — The attack on Moultrie. — Repulse of the Brit-
ish.— Distresses of the army. — Great Britain hires the Hessians. — And makes new lev-
ies.— Exasperation of the patriots. — The question of independence. — Lee's resolutions.
— Debates. — A committee is appointed. — The Declaration of Independence adopted. —
And received with enthusiasm. — Its leading principles. — Howe returns. — Lands an
army. — Attempts to open negotiations. — And fails.— The British advance on Long Is-
land.— Fight a battle. — And defeat the patriots. — Washington saves the army. — Dis-
couragement of the people.— The British take New York.— Negotiations are again at-
tempted.— But fail. — Movements of the two armies. — Battle of White Plains. — Dispo-
sition of the American forces. — Notice of Hamilton. — The capture of Fort Washington
— Fort Lee is taken. — The Americans retreat across New Jersey. — The pursuit ends. —
Enlargement of Washington's powers. — British successes in Rhode Island. — Lee's cap-
ture.— Washington recruits his army. — Recrosses the Delaware. — Defeats the British at
Trenton.— Effect of tlie battle.— Alarm of the British.— Robert Morris to the rescue.—
Washington threatens the British posts 305-317.
CHAPTER XL.
OPERATIONS OF '77.
•
The British advance against Trenton. — Washington withdraws his forces. — Attacks
Princeton. — And wins a victory. — Takes post at Morristown. — The British at New
Brunswick. — Cornwallis on the defensive. — Destruction of stores at Peekskill. — Lincoln
attacked at Boundbrook. — Tryon burns Danbury.— Is attacked and driven away. —
Meigs takes Sag Harbor.— Washington advances into New Jersey. — The British
threaten Philadelphia. — Retire to Araboy.— -Leave the State. — Barton captures Prescott.
— Congress returns to Philadelphia. — Help from France. — Coming of La Fayette and
De Kalb. — Plan of Burgoyne's campaign. — The invasion begins. — Fall of Crown Point
and Ticonderoga. — The battle of Hubbaiflton. — Capture of Whitehall. — Fort Edward
is taken. — Schuyler retreats to the Mohawk.— The British advance is impeded. — The
battle of Bennington. — St. Leger besieges Schuyler. — Herkimer brings relief. — And is
defeated. — Arnold advances. — The Indiajis desert the British. — St. Leger retreats. — Dis-
couragement of Burgoyne. — Gathering of the Americans. — Burgoyne at Saratoga. — The
first battle. — Critical condition of the British. — A diversion is attempted by Clinton. —
But fails. — The second battle. — The Americans victorious. — Burgoyne is surrounded. —
And driven to surrender. — The army of the North relieves Washington. — The move-
ment of Howe against Philadelphia.^He enters the Chesapeake. — The battle of Brandy-
wine. — Retreat of the Americans. — Washington advances to Warren's Tavern. — A
storru prevents the battle. — Countermarching of the armies. — The British capture Phil-
adelphia.— Congress adjourns to Lancaster. — Washington on Skippack Creek. — The
xxii CONTENTS.
battle of Germantown, — Capture of Forts Mercer and Mifflin. — The Americans at
Whitemarsh. — Adventure of Lydia Darrah. — The British winter at Philadelphia. — The
Americans at Valley Forge.-^orrows of Washington 317-328,
CHAPTER XLI.
FRANCE TO THE RESCUE.
Silas Deane is sent to France. — His mission. — France favors the Americans. — Sup-
plies are sent to the patriots. — Steuben arrives. — Lee and Franklin are appointed to
negotiate a treaty. — Franklin's influence at the French court. — A treaty is concluded. —
Sketch of Franklin. — Arrival of D'Estaing's fleet. — War threatened between France and
England. — Effort of Great Britain for peace. — The British fleet at Philadelphia. — With-
drawal of the squadron. — The city evacuated. — Washington pursues. — The battle of
Monmouth. — Lee disobeys orders. — Is court-martialed and dismissed. — British concen-
trate at New York. — The city threatened by D'Estaing. — He sails against Rhode Island.
— Sullivan co-operates against Newport. — Howe follows D'Estaing. — Both squadrons
shattered by a storm. — The .siege of Newport. — Abandonment of the enterprise.— De-
struction of American shipping. — Byron succeeds Howe. — Marauding of the British. —
The Wyoming massacre. — Ruin of Cherry Valley. — The expedition of Major Clarke. —
Tlie French and British fleets sail away. — A force is sent against Savannah. — Capture of
the city.— The situation 328--333,
CHAPTER XLIL
MOVEMENTS OF '79.
Hard.ships of the soldiers. — T-yon's expedition. — Is attacked by the militia. — Putj-
nam's exploit. — Fall of Stony Point and Verplank's. — Insurrection in Virginia. — Tryork
invades Connecticut. — Destruction of East Haven, Fairfield, and Norwalk.— Stony
Point is retaken by Wayne. — Lee captures Jersey City. — An American flotilla sails ta
the Penobscot. — Is ruined. — Sullivan ravages the Indian country. — The British evacuate
'Rhode Island. — War in the South. — Fort Sunbury is taken. — Fall of Augusta. — Ander-
son defeats the tories. — Pickens gains a victory. — Augusta is evacuated. — Defeat of
Lincoln's army. — The militia rally. — Lincoln takes the field. — Threatens Augusta. —
Returns to Charleston. — Is beaten at Stono Ferry. — Suspension of activity. — D'Estaing
arrives. — Siege of Savannah. — The unsuccessful assault. — Paul Jones's victory. — Re-
flections " 334-339.
CHAPTER XLIII.
REVERSES Alft) TREASON.
Operations in the North suspended. — Ternay's fleet arrives. — Campaigns are planned.
— Arbutlinot and Clinton besiege Charleston. — The city is taken. — Ravages of Tarleton.
, — Plan of tlie British to conquer .South Carolina. — Capture of Ninety-Six. — Cornwallis's
' success. — Tarleton's mas.sacre. — South Carolina is subjugated. — Clinton returns to New
York. — Marion and Sumter's bands. — They scour the country. — Their victories. — Gates
takes command. — The British at Camden. — Gates advances against them. — Is met and
defeated. — Is superseded by Greene. — Sumter's corps is broken up. — Cruelty of the
British. — Rawdon advances into North Carolina. — Ferguson's tories are defeated. —
Financial distresses.— Sacrifices of Morris.- The treason of Arnold.— Sketch of his
career. — Andr^ is sent to a conference. — The interview.— Andr^ attempts to return to
New York.— Is captured, condemned, and executed.— Treaty with Holland. 339-345.
CONTENTS. xxiii
CHAPTER XLIV.
THE END.
9
Desperate condition of the army. — The Pennsylvania line revolt. — Mutiny of the
Jersey brigade. — Eobert Morris secretary of finance. — Champe attempts to capture
Arnold. — Fails. — Arnold's expedition to Virginia. — Second plan to capture him. —
He becomes commander-in-chief in Virginia. — Is superseded. — And ordered out of the
State. — Leads a band into Connecticut. — Captures Fort Griswold. — Greene in the
South. — Advances into South Carolina. — Morgan at the Cowpens.— Is attacked by
Tarleton. — But defeats him. — Cornwallis attempts to cut off Morgan's retreat. — Greene
takes command. — Crosses the Catawba. — Eace for the Yadkin. — Greene wins it. — •
Eace for the Dan. — Greene wins it. — Chagrin of the British. — Greene turns upon
the enemy. — Lee disperses the tories. — Greene moves forward to Guilford. — Cornwallis
attacks him. — An indecisive battle. — The British retreat to Wilmington. — Cornwallis
goes to Virginia. — The Americans advance into South Carolina. — The battle of Hob-
kirk's Hill. — The British retire to Eutaw Springs. — The siege of Ninety-Six. — The
place is abandoned by the enemy. — Greene in the Highlands. — Sumter, Lee, and
Marion overrun the country. — Execution of Hayne. — Greene advances against Eutaw
Springs. — The battle. — The British retreat to Charleston. — The situation. — The cam-^
paign in Virginia. — Cornwallis ravages the State. — Marches down the James. — Iff
attacked by Wayne. — Proceeds to Portsmouth. — And thence to Yorktown. — The Army
of the North comes down upon him. — The French fleet co-operates. — Yorktown is-
besieged. — And Cornwallis's army taken. — Eejoicings. — Fall of tiie king's party in Par-
liament.— Negotiations for peace. — A treaty is concluded. — Its terms.-^Carleton super-
sedes Clinton. — Evacuation of New York. — Washington bids farewell to his officers. —
Eetires to private life. .... 345-356>
CHAPTEE XLV.
CONFEDERATION AND CNION.
Bad condition of the government. — Its defects. — Franklin pleads for union. —
A committee appointed to prepare a Constitution. — The Articles of Confederation
are adopted. — The colonies are slow to ratify. — The Confederation. — Defects of the
same. — Chaotic condition of affairs. — A firmer Constitution is projected. — The con-
vention at Annapolis. — Adjournment to Philadelphia. — The Constitution is re-
ported to the convention. — And adopted. — The last colonial Congress. — Its final work.
— The North-Avestern Territory is organized. — The several States cede their rights-
away. — St. Clair appointed governor. — Plan of organization. — Slavery is restricted. —
— The people divide on the question of adopting the Constitution. — Sketch of Ham-
ilton.— Character of the Constitution. — Amendments thereto. — The struggle in the
colonial conventions. — Eatification by eleven States. — Washington is chosen Pres-
ident.— .John Adams for the vice-presidency. — Washington's journey to New Y'"ork. —
Conclusion . 356-362.
XXIV
CONTENTS.
PAET V.
NATIONAL PERIOD.
CHAPTER XLVI.
Washington's administration.
Washington is inaugurated President. — And the new government organized. — The
country is beset with difficulties. — A cabinet is formed. — The Supreme Court is organ-
ized.— Rhode Island and North Carolina ratify the Constitution. — Washington makes a
tour through New England. — Presidential etiquette. — Hamilton's financial measures.
— The seat of government is fixed. — An Indian war breaks out. — Harmar marches
against tlie Miamis. — Is defeated on the Maumee. — The Bank of the United States is
established. — Vermont is admitted into the Union. — The first census. — St. Clair is sent
against the Indians. — His army is defeated. — The wrath of Washington. — St. Clair is
superseded by Wayne. — Kentucky is admitted. — Washington re-elected. — The foreign
relations of the government are troubled. — Genet's conduct. — Fouchet supersedes
him. — Troubles in tlie President's cabinet. — Antagonism of Jefferson and IJamilton. —
Tlie wliisky insurrection breaks out. — Is suppressed by Lee. — Wayne invades the
Indian country. — Defeats the Red men at Waynesfield. — Compels a cession of ter-
ritory.— Dies. — Great Britain orders the seizuie of American vessels. — Jay procures
reparation and a treaty. — Popular opposition thereto. — The compact with Spain. —
Peace is purchased of Algiers. — Tennessee is admitted. — Washington issues liis Fare-
well address. — The candidates for the Presidency. — Adams is elected. — ^Jeiferson for
Vice-President 363-371.
CHAPTER XLVII.
ADAMS'S ADMINISTRATION.
Sketch of John Adams. — Opposition to the new administration. — France demands
an alliance. — Orders the destruction of American commerce. — Pinckney is dismissed. —
The extra session of Congress. — Gerry, Marshall, and Pinckney are sent to France. —
The Directory want money. — Pinckney's answer. — An American army is organized. —
Washington coniander-in-chief. — The work of the navy. — Truxtun's victories.-- -Doings
of Talleyrand. — Napoleon .seeks jieace. — The successful embassy of Murray, ElLsworlh,
and Davie. — Death of Washington. — Close of the administration. — Growth of the
country. — The Alien and Sedition laws. — Overthrow of the Federal party. — Jefferson
is elected President. — And Burr Vice-President 372-376.
CHAPTER XLVIII.
Jefferson's administration.
Sketch of Jefferson. — He puts Democrats in office. — Ohio is admitted. — Indiana
and Mississippi organized. — Louisiana is purchased from France. — Boundaries. — Tlie
territory of Orleans is set off. — John Marshall in the chief-justiceship. — The Mediter-
CONTENTS. XXV
Tanean pirates.— Preble is sent against them. — The Philadelphia is captured. — Eetaker,
and burned. — The siege of Tripoli. — Expedition of Eaton. — Yusef signs a treaty. — The
duel of Burr and Hamilton. — Jefferson is re-elected. — Michigan is organized. — Lewis
and Clarke explore Oregon. — Burr makes a conspiracy. — Is tried for treason. — Brit-
ish aggressions on American commerce. — England blockades the coast of France. —
JNapoleon retaliates. — Great Britain forbids the coasting trade. — An old abuse revived.
—The rule of 1756 again asserted. — The effect on American commerce. — The English
theory of citizenship. — The object of that theory. — The attack of the Leopard on the
Chesapeake. — Passage of the Embargo Act. — The Orders in Council and Milan Decree. —
» Fulton and his steamboat. — Invention of the torpedo. — Summary of events. 376-388.
CHAPTER XLIX.
MADISON'S ADMINISTRATION AND THE WAK OF '12.
Sketch of the life and previous services of Madison. — His politics. — The Non-
intercourse Act takes the place of the Embargo. — Erskine promises the repeal of the
Orders in Council. — The promise not fulfilled. — Bonaparte makes a decree. — And then
revokes it. — Obstinacy of Great Britain. — A crisis is reached. — Third census. — Tecumtha
and the Prophet. — Harrison purchases lands. — Tecumtha refuses to ratify. — Harrison
marches up the Wabash Valley. — Approaches the Prophet's town. — Is attacked by
night. — And routs the savages. — Fight of the President and Little Belt. — The twelfth
Congress. — "War inevitable. — The President's timid disposition. — Henry's conspiracy is
discovered. — Nature of the plot. — Effect of the disclosure. — British vessels are embar-
goed.— Louisiana is admitted. — War declared against England. — Preparations. — Relative
strength of the belligerents. — Hull's campaign. — He marches to the head of Lake Erie.
— Readies Detroit. — Invades Canada. — Retreats. — Van Home's defeat. — Miller's vic-
tory.— Siege of Detroit. — Hull's disgraceful surrender. — He is convicted of cowardice.
— Capture and burning of Fort Dearborn. — Character assumed by the war.— Sketch of
the American defences. — The Constitution captures the Guernere. — The Waxp the Frolic.
— The Poictiers the Wasp. — The United States the Macedonian. — The Essex the Nocton. —
And the Constitution the Java. — Effect of these victories. — Comment of the English
newspapers. — Van Rensselaer moves against Queenstown. — Carries the batteries. —
Death of Brock. — The Americans entrench. — But are forced to surrender. — Smyth suc-
ceeds Van Rensselaer. — And makes a fool of himself. — The Americans at Black Rock
•cross and recross the river. — Madison re-elected. . > . . . 388-399.
CHAPTER L.
WAR OF '12. — CONTINUED.
Plan of the campaigns of '13. — The Americans capture Frenchtown. — Are as-
sailed by Proctor. — Surrender. — And are butcheied.— Harrison at Fort Meigs. — He
is besieged. — Clay raises the siege. — Proctor and Tecumtha return. — Attack Fort
Stephenson. — And are defeated by Croghan. — Affairs on Lake Eiie. — Perry builds
a fleet. — Attacks the British squadron. — And gains a signal victory. — Harrison em-
barks his forces to Maiden. — Follows the British and Indians to the Thames. — And
routs them in battle.-^The Creeks massacre the garrison at Fort Mims. — Jackson
and Coffee with the Tennesseeans. — They burn Tallushatchie. — Battles of Talladega
and Autosse. — Winter and starvation. — Battle of Emucfau. — And Horse Shoe Bend. —
Dearborn proceeds against Toronto. — Battle at the water's edge. — The Americans
•capture th§ town. — The British attack Sackett's Harbor. — The Americans on the
iliagara. — They storm Fort George. — Suspension of operations. — Wilkinson is made
xxvi CONTENTS.
commander-in-chief. — Expedition against Montreal, — The battle of Chrysler's Field,
—The expedition is abandoned. — Winter quarters at Fort Covington.— McClure
evacuates Fort George. — Burns Newark. — The British retaliate. — Tlie Hornet captures
the Peacock. — The Chesapeake is taken by the Shannon. — Death of Lawrence. — Cap-
ture of the ^r^ws.— The Enterprise takes the Boxer.— The Essex is captured by the
Plwebe and Chei-vh.—X British fleet bombards Lewiston.— Marauding in the Chesa-
peake 400-407.
CHAPTER lA.
CAMPAIGNS OF '14.
Scott and Ripley capture Erie.— Battles of Chippewa and Niagara.— The Amer-
icans retreat to Erie. — Siege of that place by the British.— They are driven oif. — Winter
quarters at Black Rock. — Wilkinson again invades Canada. — Is defeated at La CoUe. —
And retreats to Plattsburg. — McDonough's squadron on the lake. — The British ad-
vance.— Attack by land and water. — And are defeated. — Cochrane and Ross in the
Chesapeake. — Barney destroys his vessels. — Battle of Bladensburg. — Washington is
captured by the British.— Public buildings burned. — Alexandria pays a ransom. —
Siege of Baltimore.— Ravages in New England.— The Federal peace party.— The Hart-
ford Convention. — Jackson captures Pensacola. — Takes command at New Orleans. —
Approach of the British. — Skirmishing and fighting. — The decisive battle. — Ruin of
Packenham's army. — The news of peace. — Sea-fights afterward. — The treaty of Ghent.
— Great rejoicings.— Terms of tlie treaty. — Condition of the country. — Rechartering of
tlie United States Bank. — Tlie Mediterranean pirates again. — Decatur sent out against
them. — He ca()tures a Moorish ship. — And then another. — Enters the Bay of Algiers. —
And dictates the terms of peace. — Indiana is admitted. — Liberia founded. — Monroe is
elected President 407-416.
CHAPTER LII.
Monroe's administration.
The new President and his policy. — The cabinet. — Revival of the country. — De-
mand for the recognition of Hayti. — Treaty witli the Northwestern Indians. — Missis-
sippi is admitted. — Tlie pirates of Amelia Island dispersed. — The question of internal
improveuients arises. — The canal from Buffalo to Albany. — The Seminole war breaks^
out. — Jackson invades the hostile country. — Captures St. Marks. — Hangs Arbuthnot and
Ambrister. — Takes Pensacola. — An excitement follows. — W^hich leads to the cession of
Florida. — Great financial crisis of 1819. — Illinois is admitted. — And Alabama. — Ar-
kansas is organized. — And Maine admitted. — And Missouri. — The slavery agitation. —
And Missouri Compromise. — Its terms. — Monroe and Tompkins are re-elected.— Com-
modore Porter suppresses piracy in the "West Indies. — Sympathy of the United States
for the South American republics. — The Monroe Doctrine. — The visit of La Fayette. —
Excitement attending the presidential election. — John Quincy Adams chosen. 416-423..
CHAPTER LIII.
JOHN QUINCY ADAMS's ADMINISTRATION.
Sketch of the President. — Partisan opposition in Congress. — Internal improve-
\ients favored by the executive. — Trouble with Georgia about the lands of the Creeks,
'Settled by a treaty. — Death of Adams and Jefferson. — The Masonic excitement in
CONTENTS xvii
CHAPTER XXVIII.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
A colony is sent out under West and Sayle. — Reaches Beaufort. — But settles on
Asliley River. — Locke's constitution is rejected. — And a simple government adopted. —
West becomes governor. — And then Yeamans. — Slavery is introduced. — Rapid immi-
gration.— Charleston is founded. — An Indian war arises. — Immigrants arrive from
England, Scotland, and Ireland. — The Edict of Nantes is revoked. — The Huguenots
flock to South Carolina. — Colleton becomes governor. — Declares martial law. — Is over-
thrown.— Sothel Takes the office. — Is banished. — Ludwell next. — Who retires to Vir-
ginia.— The proprietors abrogate the grand model. — The Quaker Archdale. — His wise
administration. — Moore succeeds. — The war with Florida. — Moore and Daniel attempt
to take St. Augustine. — And fail. — Moore makes a successful campaign against the In-
dians.— The Church of England is established. — The dissenters are disfranchised. — But
the act is revoked by Parliament. — The Spaniards besiege Charleston. — And are re-
pelled.— War with the Yamassees. — The savages are conquered. — Popular revolution
in South Carolina. — Nicholson is governor. — The proprietors sell Carolina to the
king. — A royal government is established. — Character of the people. . 230-237.
CHAPTER XXIX.
GEOBGIA.
Georgia founded in benevolence. — Oglethorpe the founder. — Sketch of his life. —
He leads forth a colony. — And founds Savannah. — The friendly natives. — A treaty is
made with the Muskhogees. — Immigrants arrive from various parts of Europe. — Ogle-
thorpe goes to England-T-Returns. — The Moravians. — The Wesleys. — And Whitefield. —
Conflicting claims of Georgia and Florida. — Oglethorpe builds forts. — Is commissioned
as general. — AVar breaks out. — The governor besieges St. Augustine. — And fails. — The
Spaniards invade Georgia. — Oglethorpe's stratagem. — The battle of Bloody Marsh. —
'The Spaniards are defeated. — And retreat to Florida. — The governor returns to Eng-
land.— Slavery is introduced. — The prohibitory law is repealed. — Growth of Georgia. —
.Eeflections on the thirteen colonies 238-244.
COLONIAL HISTORY.— Continued.
FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR.
CHAPTER XXX.
CAUSES.
The colonies begin to act together. — A sense of common danger unites them. — The
Trench and Indian War arises. — Causes considered. — Conflicting territorial claims. —
English colonies on the sea-boar9. — French colonies in the interior. — France purposes
■to confine the English to the Atlantic slope. — French settlements result from the efibrta
xxviii CONTENTS.
into exile. — They journey to Salt Lake. — The Texas excitement begins. — Outline of
Texas history. — The people rebel against Mexico. — Battle of Gonzales. — Capture of the-
Alamo. — And massacre of the garrison. — Tlie battle of San Jacinto decides the contest.
— Texas independent. — Seeks admission into tlie Union. — Is refused at first. — The peo-
ple of the United States divide on the question of annexation. — On that issue Polk
is elected President. — Professor Morse and the telegraph. — Texas admitted into the
Union 440-447.
CHAPTER LVII.
Sketch of President Polk. — Texas ratifies the annexation. — General Taylor sent to-
defend the country. — The boundary question. — Proposition to negotiate. — Mexico
refuses. — Taylor ordered to the Neuces. — And thence to the Rio Grande. — He estab-
lishes a jjost at Point Isabel. — And builds Fort Brown. — Beginning of liostilities by tlie
Alexicans. — Taylor retires to Point Isabel. — Mexican boasting. — Returns toward Mata-
moras. — Meets the Mexicans. — Fights and gains the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de
la Palnia. — Siege of Fort Brown. — News of the battles in the United States. — Declaration
of War. — Plan of tlie campaigns. — General Wool musters the forces. — Taylor captures-
Matamoras. — Advances against Monterey. — Besieges and storms the town. — An armis-
tice.— Santa Anna made President of Mexico and general of the army. — Saltillo is taken
by Worth. — Victoria by Patterson. — And Tampico by Conner. — Wool advances. — And
Scott a.ssumes command. — Kearney captures Santa Fe. — Maves westward. — Is joined by
Carson. — And marches to the Pacific coast. — The deeds of Colonel Fremont. — Rebellion
of the Californians. — They defeat the Mexicans. — Monterey, San Diego, and Los Angelos
taken. — Battle of San Gabriel. — The march and battles of Colonel Doniphan. — Taylor's
and Wool's forces ordered to the coast. — Critical condition of Taylor's army. — Ap-
proach of Santa Anna. — Battle of Buena Vista. — Retirement of Taylor from the
service. — Scott besieges and captures Vera Cruz. — Marches against the capital. — Battle
of Cerro Gordo — Jalapa, Perote, and Puebla are taken. — Negotiations. — The march
renewed. — The army passes the Cordilleras. — Reaches Aj'otla. — Turns to the left. — The
approaches and fortifications of the city. — Storming of Contreras and San Antonio. —
Churubusco is carried. — The Mexicans driven back to Chapultepec. — More foolish nego-
tiations.— Scott rests his army. — And then advances. — Molino del Rey and Casa de
Mata are stormed. — Chapultepec is taken. — Flight of the Mexican government. — The
American army enters the city. — Santa Anna attacks the hospitals at Pnebla. — Is driven
oflT by General Lane. — Downfall of the Mexican authority. — The treaty of Gaudalupe
Hidalgo. — Its terms. — Settlement of the Oregon boundary. — The international line es-
tablished on the forty-ninth parallel. — Tlie discovery of gold in California. — The excite-
ment which ensued. — Importance of the mines. — Founding of the Smith.sonian Institu-
tion.— Death of Jackson and John Quincy Adams. — Wisconsin is admitted. — Establi.«h-
ment of the Department of the Interior. — The canvass for President. — Rise of the Free
Soil party. — The Wilmot proviso. — Election of Taylor to the presidency. 447-462.
CHAPTER LVIII.
ADMINISTRATIONS OF TAYLOK AND FILLMORE.
Sketch of the chief magistrate. — The question of slavery in California. — .\ terri-
torial government is organized. — A petition for admission. — The controversy in Con-
gress.— Other political vexations. — Clay as a peace-maker. — Passage of the Omnibus
Bill. — And its provisions. — Death of the President. — The slavery excitement subsides-
CONTENTS.
XXIX
— The question not permanently settled. — Eetirement of Mr. Clay. — Effects of the Om-
nibus Bill on the administration. — The Cuban expedition is organized. — Lopez and hi*
associates are executed. — Important measures recommended by the President. — A diffi-
culty arises about the coast-fisheries. — And is settled by a treaty. — The tour of Ko.ssuth.
— Arctic expeditions of Franklin, De Haven, and Kane. — Death of Calhoun, Clay, and
Webster. — The Cuban excitement in Europe. — The Tripartite Treaty is proposed. —
And rejected. — Everett's reply to France and Great Britain. — The candidates for th&
presidency. — Pierce is elected 463-469.
CHAPTER LIX.
Pierce's administration.
Sketch of Franklin Pierce. — A route for a Pacific railroad is explored. — Settle-
ment of the boundary of New Mexico. — The Japanese ports are opened to the United
States. — The World's Fair. — Walker organizes a filibustering expedition against Central
America. — Is captured.— Makes a second descent on Nicaraugua. — And then a third.-^
Is defeated, captured, and executed. — The Martin Koszta affair. — Cuban difficulties. —
The Ostend manifesto. — A bill to organize Kansas and Nebraska is passed. — Repeal
of the Missouri Compromise. — Renewal of the slavery agitation. — The troubles in Kan-
sas.— Two territorial governments are organized. — Geary sent thither as military gov-
ernor.— Marshaling of parties on the slavery question. — Buchanan is elected to the pres-
idency 469-474.
CHAPTER LX.
Buchanan's administration.
Sketch of the President. — The Dred Scott decision. — The Mormon rebellion ir>
Utah. — Is suppressed by the army. — A difficulty arises with Paraguay. — But is settled
by treaty. — The first Atlantic cable is laid. — Minnesota is admitted. — Retirement and
sketch of Houston. — Death of Washington Irving. — His work in American literature.
— The Personal Liberty bills. — John Brown's insurrection. — Continuance of the troubles
in Kansas — The political parties again divide on the slavery question. — The National
conventions. — ^The candidates and the canvass. — Lincoln is elected President. — Condi-
tion of affairs in the government. — Position of Buchanan. — The drama of secession. —
Seven States Avithdraw from the Union. — The secession conventions. — Position of Steph-
ens.— Organization of the Provisional Confederate government. — Davis for President. —
The peace movements end in failure. — Paralysis of the administration. — Seizure
of forts and arsenals by the Confederates. — The strife in Kansas continues. — The
Stxir of the West is driven off from Fort Sumter. — The President elect reaches Wash-
ington 474-482.
CHAPTER LXI.
Lincoln's administration and the civil war.
Sketch of Abraham Lincoln. — Organization of his cabinet. — His purpose to repos-
sess the forts of the United States. — Preparations to reinforce Fort Sumter. — Confed-
erate movements in Charleston. — Bombardment and fall of Fort Sumter. — The event
fires the nation. — The call for troops. — Secession of Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina,
and Tennessee. — The soldiers attacked in Baltimore. — Capture of Harper's Ferry and
the Norfolk navy yard. — Prodigious activity and preparations. — Davis and his cabinet
at Richmond 482-485i
XXX CONTENTS.
CHAPTER LXII.
THE CAUSES.
The causes. — First, the different construction of the Constitution in the North and
the South. — Fatal character of this dispute. — Second, the system of slavery. — The
cotton gin. — The Missouri agitation. — The annexation of Texas, and the Mexican
War. — The nullification measures of South Carolina. — The Omnibus Bill. — The Kan-
sas-Nebraska imbroglio. — Third, the want of intercour.se between the North and
the South. — Fourth, the publication of sectional books. — Fifth, the influence of dema-
.^ogues. ......... . . . . 485—488.
CHAPTER LXIir.
FIRST YEAR OF THE WAR.
Advance of the Union army. — Fight at Big Bethel. — Morris and McClellan move
forward in West Virginia. — Engagements at Philippi, Rich Mountain, Carrick's Ford,
Carnifex Ferry, Cheat Mountain, and Romney. — The Confederates concentrate at
Manassas. — The national forces advance. — The skirmish, the battle, and the rout.—
Effect on the country. — The Confederate government at Richmond. — Sketch of Davis.
— Affairs in Missouri. — Confederates capture Liberty. — Form Camp Jackson. — Lyon
defends St. Louis. — Battles of Carthage and Springfield. — Price captures Lexington. —
Fremont pursues him. — And is superseded. — Grant captures Belmont. — McClellan is
made commander-in-chief. — The disaster at Ball's Bluff. — Hatteras inlet, Port Royal,
and Hilton Head secured by the Federals. — Capture of Mason and Slidell. — They are
released by Mr. Seward 490-495.
CHAPTER LXIV.
CAMPAIGNS OF '62.
o
Extent and position of the Union forces. — The Confederates defeated on the Bi
Sandy and at Mill Spring. — Fort Henry is taken. — Siege and capture of Fort Donelson.
— Battle of Shiloh. — Island Number Ten is taken. — The battle of Pea Ridge. — Fight
of the Monitor and the Merrimac. — Burnside captures Roanoke Island, Newbern, and
Beaufort. — Savannah is blockaded. — Farragut aud Butler ascend the Mississippi. — Pass
Forts Jackson and St. Philip. — Capture of New Orleans. — Fall of Jackson and St.
Philip. — Kirby Smith invades Kentucky. — Battle of Richmond. — Bragg marches on
Louisville. — The city held by Buell. — Bragg retreats. — Battle of Perry ville. — Battles of
luka and Corinth. — Grant moves against Vicksburg. — Retreats. — Battle of Chickasaw
Bayou. — Battle of Murfreesborough.— Banks and Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley. —
Fight at Front Royal. — The Federals retreat across the Potomac. — The Confederates
fall back in turn.— Battles of Cross Keys and Port Republic— McClellan advances. —
Beginning of the Peninsular campaign. — Yorktown is taken. — Then "Williamsburg and
West Point.— Wool captures Norfolk.— The Virginia destroyed.- Battle of Fair Oaks.—
Lee made general-in-chief of the Confederates.— McClellan changes base.— The seven
days' battles.— The Union army at Harrison's Landing. — Lee strikes for Washington. —
Is opposed by Pope.— Flank movement of Jackson.— Battles of Manassas, Centreville,
and Chantilly.— I^e invades Maryland.— Harper's Ferry is taken.— Engagement at
South Mountain.— Battle of Antietam.— Confederates retreat.— Burnside in command.—
Plans a campaign against Richmond. — Advances against Fredericksburg. — And is de-
feated 495-510.
CONTENTS. xxxi
CHAPTER LXV.
THE WORK OF '63.
Proportions of the conflict. — New calls for troops. — The Emancipation Proclama-
-tion. — Capture of Arkansas Post. — Movements against Vicksburg. — The fleet passes the
batteries. — Grant at Bruinsburg. — Battles of Port Gibson, Raymond, Jackson, and
Champion Hills.— The siege and capture of Vicksburg. — Fall of Port Hudson.— Cav-
alry raids of Jackson, Stuart, and Grierson. — Rosecrans drives Bragg across the Ten-
nessee.— Battle of Chattanooga. — And the siege. — Storming of Lookout and Missionary
Ridge. — Longstreet in Tennessee. — Siege of Knoxville. — Engagements at Springfield,
Cape Girardeau, and Helena. — The sacking of Lawrence. — Capture of Little Rock. —
Morgan invades Indiana. — Passes into Ohio. — Is hemmed in and captured. — The Con-
federates take Galveston. — The siege of Charleston. — Hooker commands the Army of
the Potomac. — Battle of Chancellorsville. — Death of Stonewall Jackson. — Stoneman's
raid. — Siege of Suffolk. — Lee invades Pennsylvania. — The battle of Gettysburg. — Re-
treat of the Confederates.— The conscription.— Riot in New York.— The draft.— New
calls for soldiers. — West Virginia a State. ...... 510-523.
'o*
CHAPTER LXVL
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS.
Sherman's campaign to Meridian. — Smith fails to form a junction. — Sherman
retires to Vicksburg. — Forrest's raid. — The Red River expedition. — Plan of the cam-
paign.— Capture of Fort de Russy, Alexandria, and Natchitoches. — Union disaster and
retreat. — Steele falls back to Little Rock. — Grant lieutenant-general. — Plan of the cam-
paigns of '64. — Sherman advances. — Battles of Dalton, Resaca, and Dallas. — Attacks
and repulses at Kenesaw. — The Confederates fall back to Atlanta. — Siege and capture of
the stronghold. — Hood invades Tennessee. — Thomas sent to confront him. — Battle of
Franklin. — Siege of Nashville. — Rout and ruin of Hood's army. — Sherman's march to
the .<!ea. — Capture of Macon, Milledgeville, Gibson, and Waynesborough. — Storming
-of Fort McAllister. — Escape of Hardee. — And capture of the city. — The Union army in
Savannah. — Renewal of the march. — Columbia, Charleston, and Fayetteville are taken.
— Battle of Kilpatrick's and Hampton's Cavalry. — Johnston restored to command. —
Battles of Averasborough and Bentonsville. — Capture of Goldsborough and Raleigh. —
Great raid of Stoneman. — Surrender of Johnston. — Farragut enters Mobile Bay. —
Defeats the Confederate squadron. — Captures Forts Gaines and Morgan, — Fort Fisher
is besieged by Porter and Butler. — The first effort fails. — The siege is renewed. —
And the fort taken by storm. — Cushing's exploit. — The Confederate cruisers. — Injury
■done to the commerce of the United States. — The Savannah. — Career of the Sumter. —
Cruise of the Nashville. — The Confedei-ates use the British ship-yards. — Building of the
Florida. — Her fate. — The Georgia, the Olustee, the Shenandoah, and the Chickamauga built
at Glasgow. — End of the Chickamauga and the Tallahassee. — Career of the Georgia and
the Shenandoah. — The Alabama. — Her character. — She scours the ocean. — Runs into
Cherbourg. — Is caught by the Kearsarge. — And destroyed. — The Army of the Potomac
moves from Culpepper. — Reaches the Wilderness. — The battles. — Grant advances to
5pottsylvania. — Terrible fighting there. — The Union army moves to Cold Harbor. —
Is repulsed in two battles. — Losses. — Grant changes base. — Butler captures Bermuda
and City Point. — Is driven back by Beauregard. — Junction of the armies. — Advance on
Petersburg. — The assaults. — The siege begins. — Sigel on the Shenandoah. — Battle of
New Market. — Hunter in command. — Engagement at Piedmont. — Retreat of Hunter. —
Early enters the valley. — Crosses the Potomac. — Defeats Wallace. — Threatens Wash-
3
xxxii CONTENTS.
ington and Baltimore.— Eetreats into Virginia. — Fight at Winchester. — The Confed-
erates burn Chambersburg. — Sheridan is sent into the valley. — Battles of Winchester
and Fisher's Hill.— Sheridan ravages the country.— Early comes.— Routs the Federals
at Cedar Creek.— Sheridan returns, and destroys Early's army.— The siege of Peters-
burg continues. — Battles of Boydtown and Five Forks. — Flight of the Confederate-
government. — Fall of Petersburg and Richmond. — Surrender of Lee. — Collapse of the
Confederacy. — The Federal authority is re-established. — Capture, imprisonment, and
trial of Davis.— Lincoln re-elected.— Financial condition of the country.— Treasury-
notes. — Internal Revenue. — Legal Tenders. — Bonds. — Banks. — The debt. — Lincoln is-
reinaugurated. — Visits Richmond. — Is assassinated. — Punishment of his murderers. —
Character of Lincoln. 523-543»
CHAPTER LXVII.
Johnson's administration.
Johnson in the presidency. — Sketch of his life and character. — Slavery is formally-
abolished. — The Amnesty Proclamation. — A struggle with the war-debt. — Napoleon's
empire in Mexico. — Maximilian is captured and shot. — Final success of the Atlantic
telegraph. — The Postal Money-Order system is established. — The Territories assume
their final form.— Alaska is purchased from Russia. — The difficulty between the Presi-
dent and Congress. — The reconstruction imbroglio. — Second amnesty. — The Civil Rights
Bill is passed. — The Southern States are re-admitted. — A national convention at Phila-
delpliia. — The President makes a tour of the country. — Congressional measures of
reconstruction. — The breach is widened between the executive and Congress. — The ve-
toing business. — The President removes Stanton. — Is impeached. — And acquitted. — Gen-
eral Grant is elected President 544-551.
CHAPTER LXVIII.
grant's administration.
Sketch of President Grant.— The Pacific Railroad is completed.— The Fourteenth
and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution are adopted. — The story of Black
Friday. — The Southern States are restored to their place in the Union. — The ninth
census and its lesson. — The Santo Domingo business. — The Alabama claims are ad-
justed by the treaty of Washington and the Geneva court. — Railroad development
of the United States.— The burning of Chicago.— The North-western boundary is
.settled by arbitration. — The presidential election. — The candidates. — Grant is re-
elected.— Character of Greeley. — His death. — Great fire in Boston. — The Modoc war. —
Murder of the peace commissioners. — The savages are subdued. — The Louisiana im-
broglio.— The Credit Mobilier investigation. — The financial crisis of 1873-'74. — The
Northern Pacific Railroad enterprise. — Admission of Colorado. — Death-roll of emi-
nent men.— Sketches of Sumner and Wilson. — The great Centennial.— Origination of
the enterprise. — Opposition. — General plan of the Exposition. — Organization. — The
monetary management. — Lukewarmness of the Government. — The Centennial Grounds.
— Dedication. — The General Regulations. — Nations participating. — Classification of
products. — The Centennial Buildings. — Descriptions of the same. — Main Building. —
Memorial Hall. — Machinery Hall. — Agricultural Hall. — Horticultural Hall. — United
States Government Building. — Woman's Pavilion. — Foreign and State Buildings. — Re-
ception of materials. — Scheme of Awards. — Opening ceremonies. — The Exposition
itself. — Description of exhibits in Main Building. — In Machinery Hall. — In the Gov-
CONTENTS.
XZXlll
emment Building. — In Agricultural Hall. — In Horticultural Hall. — In tlie Woman's
Viivilion.— In Memorial Hall.— Tlie celebration of the Fourth of July in Philadel-
pliia. — Attendance at the Exposition. — The closing ceremonies. — Tlie Sioux War. — Tlie
great election of 1876. — A disputed presidency. — The result. . 552-632.
CHAPTER LXIX.
Hayes's administration.
Sketcli of President Hayes. — His inaugural address. — The policy indicated. — Effect
of the same upon the country. — The new cabinet is organized. — The great Railroad
Strike breaks out. — And is suppressed. — Beginning of the Nez Perce War. — The tribe is
subdued by General Howard. — Silver is remonetized. — The Yellow Fever epidemic in
the South. — The Halifax Fishery Commission. — How constituted. — The award — A
Ciiinese Embassy established in the United States. — A Life Saving Service is instituted
by Congress. — Resumption of Specie Payments by the Government. — Issues of 1880. —
Garfield elected President. — Refunding legislation. — Tour of Ex-President Grant. — Re-
sults of the Census of 1880. — Death of Senator Morton, William Cullen Bryant, Bay-
ard Taylor, and Senators Chandler and Carpenter. . . 633-646.
CHAPTER LXX.
Sketch of President Garfield. — His inaugural. — The new cabinet. — Concluding
reflections 647-650.
CHAPTER LXXI.
CONCLUSION.
The outlook for the Republic. — Byron's view of nations. — The hopeful side. —
Present achievements of the United States. — Natural advantages. — How the Saxon has
improved them, — Things necessary to the perpetuity of American institutions: First,
National Unity. — Second, Universal Education. — Third, Toleration. — Fourth, The No-
bility of Labor. — Reflections 651-654.
APPEE"DIXES.
Appendix A.-
Appendix B.-
Appendix C-
Appendix D.-
Appendix E.-
Appendix F.-
Appendix G.-
-Mandeville's Argument
-Franklin's Constitution
-Declaration of Independence
-Articles of Confederation
-Constitution of the United States
-Wasliington's Farewell Address .
-The Emancipation Proclamation
655-658.
659-660.
661-663.
664r-669.
670-680.
681-690.
691-692.
Vocabulary
Index .
693-695.
696-705.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
Paof.
Front view of the Capitol Frontispiece.
Map of Aboriginal America 44
Diagram of European Kinship 45
Diagram of Indian Kinship 46
Specimen of Indian Writing 48
A North American Indian 49
Norse Explorations 52
A Norse Sea King of the 11th Century 53
Christopher Columbus 55
Chart of Voyage and Discovery 56
Fernando Cortez 59
Map of Voyage and Discovery 76
Map of English Grants 86
Captain John Smith 96
Jamestown and Vicinity 103
Chart of the Colonial Period 122
The Treaty between Governor Carver and Massasoit 124
John Winthrop 127
Roger Williams' reception by the Indians 129
Early Settlements in New England 131
First Scene of King Philip's War 140
Second Scene of King Philip's War 141
Third Scene of King Philip's War 143
Siege of Louisburg, 1745 158
Sir Henry Hudson . 101
French, English, Dutch, Swedish and Spanish Provinces, 1655 . . . .168
Peter Stuyvesant 171
Scene of the Pequod War 187
The Younger Winthrop 190
The Old Stone Tower at Newport 195
East and West Jersey, 1677 205
William Penn 211
Philadelphia and Vicinity 213
Lord Baltimore 217
James Oglelliorpe 239
Country of the Savannah, 1740 . . . . ' 242
First Scene of the Frencli and Indian War, 1750 253
Scene of Brad dock's Defeat, 1755 260
The Acadian Isthmus, 1755 262
The Exile of the Acadians „ 263
Vicinity of Lake George, 1755 265
(xx.xiv)
o
ILLUSTRATIONS. xxxv
Page
Vicinity of Quebec, 1759 274
General James Wolfe 275
The Eevelation of Pontiac's Conspiracy 278
The Old Thirteen Colonies 281
Patrick Henry 290
Samuel Adams 295
Scene of the Battle of Bunker Hill, 1775 300
" Siege of Boston, 1776 306
Chart of the Kevolution and Confederation 306
Battle of Long Island, 1776 311
Scene of Operations about New York, 1776 314
Battles of Trenton and Princeton, 1776-7 316
Scene of Burgoyne's Invasion, 1777 323
Encampment at Valley Forge, 1777-8 . . . .' 327
Benjamin Franklin 330
Siege of Charleston, 1780 340
Scene of Operations in the South, 1780-1 342
Scene of Arnold's Treason, 1780 344
General Greene 351
Siege of Yorktown, October, 1781 353
Map of the United States at the Close of the Eevolution 354
Alexander Hamilton 359
George Washington 363
Chart of the National Period — First Section 364
John Adams 372
Thomas Jefferson 377
Chief-Justice Marshall 380
Kobert Fulton 386
James Madison 389
Scene of Hull's Campaign, 1812 394
The Niagara Frontier, 1812 399
Sceneof the Creek War, 1813-14 403
La Fayette 423
Chart of the National Period — Second Section 424
Andrew Jackson 427
Daniel Webster 429
The New Patent-Office at Washington 433
Bunker Hill Monument 443
Professor Morse 446
Texas and Coahuila, 1845 " . . . . 448
Scene of Taylor's Campaign, 1846-47 449
Scene of Scott's Campaign, ISdt 454
General Winfield Scott 457
The Smithsonian Institution 460
President Taylor 463
Henry Clay 465
John C. Calhoun 468
General Sam Houston 477
Washington Irving 478
Alexander H. Stephens 481
Abraham Lincoln 483
xxxvi ILLUSTRATIONS.
Page
Chart of the National Period— Third Section ....... 489
Scene of Operations in West Virginia, 1861 490
Vicinity of Manassas Junction, 1861 .- . 491
Jefferson Davis . . . . » 492
Scene of Operations in the South-west, 1861 493
WiUiam H. Seward 495
Battle of Murfreesborough, December 31st, 1862 500
Battle of Murfreesborough, January 2d, 1863 501
Scene of Campaign in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania, 1862 . . . 503
General Eobert E. Lee 504
Vicinity of Kichmond, 1862 505
The Battle of Antietam, September 17, 1862 507
The Proposed Koutes from Washington to Richmond, 1862 508
Vicksburg and Vicinity, 1863 512
Battle of Chickamauga, September 19, 20, 1863 514
Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, November 23-25, 1863 .... 515
Stonewall Jackson 519
Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 2, 3, 1863 520
Sherman's Campaign, 1864 525
General Thomas 527
General Sherman 528
Admiral Farragut 531
Operations in Virginia, 1864 and 1865 535
Petersburg, Richmond, Appomattox, 1865 539
Map of the United States, 1876 546
Chief-Justice Chase 551
President Grant 552
Map of the Territorial Growth of the United States 556
Horace Greeley 558
Charles Sumner 562
Independence Hall, 1876 563
General Joseph R. Hawley 566
Centennial Medal — Obverse 567
Centennial Medal — Reverse 567
The Centennial Grounds and Buildings 569
Main Exposition Building, Centennial Exhibition 576
Memorial Hall, " " 579
Machinery Hall, " " 581
Agricultural Hall, " " 583
Horticultural Hall, « " 585
U. S. Government Building, " " 587
Woman's Pavilion, " " 589
Inaugural Ceremonies of the Centennial Exhibition 593
Alfred T. Goshorn 595
View in the Main Exhibition Building 597
Interior View of Machinery Hall . 607
Interior View of the United States Government Building 613
Interior View of Agricultural Hall 616
Interior View of Horticultural Hall 621
Rotunda of Memorial Hall 623
Scene of the Sioux War, 1876 629
Riillierford R. Hayes 633
Jimies A. (iiirfield 647
INTRODUCTION.
1. The history of every nation is divided into periods. For
a while the genius of a people will be turned to some particular pur-
suit. Men will devote themselves to certain things and labor to ac-
complish certain results. Then the spirit of the age will change, and
historical facts will assume a different character. Thus arises what is
called A Period in History. In studying the history of the United
States it is of the first importance to understand the periods into which
it is divided.
2. First of all, there was a time when the New World was under
the dominion of the aborigines. From ocean to ocean the copper-col-
ored children of the woods ruled with undisputed sway. By bow and
arrow, by flint and hatchet, the Red man supported his rude civiliza-
tion and waited for the coming of the pale-faced races.
3. After the discovery of America, the people of Europe were
hundreds of years in making themselves acquainted with the shape and
character of the New World. During that time explorers and adven-
turers went everywhere and settled nowhere. To make new discov-
eries was the universal passion ; but nobody cared to plant a colony.
As long as this spirit prevailed, historical events bore a common char-
acter, being produced by common causes. Hence arose the second pe-
riod in our history — the Period of Voyage and Discovery.
4. As soon as the adventurers had satisfied themselves with trac-
ing sea-coasts, ascending rivers and scaling mountains, they began to
form permanent settlements. And each settlement was a new State in
the wilderness. Every voyager now became ambitious to plant a col-
ony. Kings and queens grew anxious to confer their names on the
towns and commonwealths of the New World. Thus arose a third pe-
riod— the Period of Colonial History.
(xixvii)
„j^iii INTRODUCTION.
5. Then the colonies grew strong and multiplied. There were
thirteen little sea-shore republics. The people began to consult about
their privileges and to talk of the rights of freemen. Oppression on
the part of the mother-country was met with resistance, and tyranny
with defiance. There was a revolt against the king ; and the patriots
of the different colonies fought side by side, and won their freedom.
Then they built them a Union, strong and great. This is the Period
of Revolution and Confederation.
6. Then the United States of America entered upon their career
as a nation. Three times tried by war and many times vexed with
civil dissensions, the Union of our fathers still remains for us and for
posterity. Such is the Period of Nationality.
7. Collecting these results, we find five distinctly marked peri-
ods in the history of our country :
First. The Aboriginal Period ; from remote antiquity to the
coming of the White men.
Second. The Period of Voyage and Discovery; A. D.
986-1607.
Third. The Colonial Period; A. D. 1607-1775.
Fourth. The Period of Revolution and Confederation;
A. D. 1775-1789.
Fifth. The National Period; A. D. 1789-1881.
In this order the History of the United States will be presented
in the following pages.
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
PART I.
ABOEIGIJSTAL AMEEIOA.
CHAPTER I.
TEE RED MEN— ORIGIN, DISTRIBUTION, CHARACTER.
THE primitive inhabitants of the New World were the Red men
called Indians. The name Indian was conferred upon them from
their real or fancied resemblance to the people of India. But without
any such similarity the name would have been the same; for Colum-
bus and his followers, believing that they had only rediscovered the
Indies, would of course call the inhabitants Indians. The supposed
similarity between the two races, if limited to mere personal appearance,
had some foundation in fact; but in manners, customs, institutions,
and character, no two peoples could be more dissimilar than the Amer-
ican aborigines and the sleepy inhabitants of China and Japan.
The origin of the North American Indians is involved in com-
plete obscurity. That they are one of the older races of mankind can
not be doubted. But at what date or by what route they came to the
Western continent is an unsolved problem. Many theories have been
proposed to account for the Red man's presence in the New World,
but most of them have been vague and unsatisfactory. The notion that
the Indians are the descendants of the Israelites is absurd. That half
civilized tribes, wandering from beyond the Euphrates, should reach
North America, surpasses human credulity. That Europeans or Afri-
cans, at some remote period, crossed the Atlantic by voyaging from is-
land to island, seems altogether improbable. That the Kamtchatkans,.
coming by way of Behring's Strait, reached the frozen North-west and
(41)
42 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
became the progenitors of the Eed men, has no evidence other than
•conjecture to suj)port it. Until further research shall throw additional
light on the history and migrations of the primitive races of mankind,
the origin of the Indians will remain shrouded in mystery. It is not
unlikely that a more thorough knowledge of the North American lan-
guages may furnish a clue to the early history of the tribes that spoke
them.
The Indians belong to the Ganowanian, or Bow-and-Arrow
family of men. Some races cultivate the soil; others have herds and
flocks; others build cities and ships. To the Red man of the Western
continent the chase was every thing. Without the chase he pined and
languished and died. To smite with swift arrow the deer and the bear
was the chief delight and profit of the primitive Americans. Such a
race could live only in a country of woods and wild animals. The il-
limitable hunting-grounds — forest, and hill, and river — were the In-
dian's earthly paradise, and the type of his home hereafter.
The American aborigines belonged to several distinct families or
nations. Above the sixtieth parallel of latitude the whole continent
from Labrador to Alaska was inhabited by the Esquimaux. The name
means the eaters of raw meat. They lived in snow huts, or in hovels,
partly or wholly underground. Sometimes their houses were more ar-
tistically constructed out of the bones of whales and walruses. Their
manner of life was that of fishermen and hunters. They clad them-
selves in winter with the skins of seals, and in summer with those of
reindeers. Inured to cold and exposure, they made long journeys in
sledges drawn by dogs, or risked their lives in open boats fighting
with whales and polar bears among the terrors of the icebergs. By
eating abundantly of oils and fat meats they kept the fires of life
a-burning, even amid the rigors and desolations of the Arctic winter.
Lying south of the Esquimaux, embracing the greater part of
Canada and nearly all that portion of the United States east of the
Mississippi and north of the thirty-seventh parallel of latitude,
spread the great family of the Algonquins. It appears that their
original seat was on the Ottawa River. At the beginning of the sev-
enteenth century the Algonquins numbered fully a quarter of a million.
The tribes of this great family were nomadic in their habits, roaming
from one hunting-ground and river to another, according to the exi-
gencies of fishing and the chase. Agriculture was but little esteemed.
They were divided into many subordinate tribes, each having its local
name, dialect, and traditions. When the first European settlements
were planted the Algonquin race was already declining in numbers
ABORIGINAL AMERICA. 43
and influence. Wasting diseases destroyed whole tribes. Of all the
Indian nations the Algonquins suffered most from contact with the
White man. Before his aggressive spirit, his fiery rum, and his de-
structive weapons, the warriors were unable to stand. The race has
withered to a shadow; only a few thousands remain to rehearse the
story of their ancestors.
Within the wide territory occupied by the Algonquins lived the
powerful nation of THE Huron-Iroquois. Their domain extended
over the country reaching from Georgian Bay and Lake Huron to
Lakes Erie and Ontario, south of those lakes to the valley of the Up-
per Ohio, and eastward to the River Sorel. Within this extensive dis-
trict was a confederacy of vigorous tribes, having a common ancestry,
and generally — though not always — acting together in war. At the
time of their greatest power and influence the Huron-Iroquois em-
braced no less than nine allied nations. These were the Hurons
proper, living north of Lake Erie; the Eries and Andastes, south of
the same water; the Tuscaroras, of "^Carolina, who ultimately joined
their kinsmen in the North ; the Senecas, Cayugas, Onondagas, Onei-
das, and Mohawks, constituting the famous Five Nations of New York.
The warriors of this great confederation presented the Indian character
in its most favorable aspect. They were brave, patriotic, and eloquent ;
not wholly averse to useful industry; living in respectable villages;
tilling the soil with considerable success; faithful as friends but terri-
ble as enemies.
South of the country of the Algonquins were the Cherokees
and THE MoBiLiAN Nations; the former occupying Tennessee, and
the latter covering the domain between the Lower Mississippi and the
Atlantic. The Cherokees were highly civilized for a primitive peo-
ple, and contact with the whites seemed to improve rather than
degrade them. The principal tribes of the Mobilians were the Ya-
massees and Creeks of Georgia, the Seminoles of Florida, and the
Choctaws and Chickasaws of Mississippi. These displayed the usual
characteristics of the Red men, with this additional circumstance, that
below the thirty-second parallel of latitude evidences of temple-build-
ing, not practiced among the Northern tribes, began to appear.
West of the Father of Waters was the great and widely-spread
race of the Dakotas, whose territory extended from the Arkansas
River to the country of the Esquimaux and westward to the Rocky
Mountains. Their languages and institutions, differing much among
the various tribes, are not so well understood as those of some other
•nations. South of the land of the Dakotas, in a district nearly cor-
44 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
responding with the present State of Texas, lived the wild Coman-
CHES, whose very name is a synonym for savage ferocity. Beyond the
Rocky Mountains were the Indian nations of the Plains; the great
family of the Shoshonees, the Selish, the Klamaths, and the
Californians. On the Pacific slope farther southward dwelt in for-
mer times the famous races of Aztecs and Toltecs. These were the
most civilized of the primitive Indian nations, but at the same time
among the most feeble ; the best builders in wood and stone, but the
least warlike of any of the aborigines. Such is a brief sketch of the
distribution of the copper-colored race in the New World. The ter-
ritorial position of the various nations and tribes will be easily under-
stood from an examination of the accompanying map.
The Indians were strongly marked with national peculiarities.
The most striking characteristic of the race was a certain sense of per-
sonal independence — willfulness of action — freedom from restraint. To
the Red man's imagination the idea of a civil authority which should
subordinate his passions, curb his will, and thwart his purposes, was
intolerable. Among this people no common enterprise was possible
unless made so by the concurrence of free wills. If the chieftain
entered the war-path, his kinsmen and the braves of other tribes fol-
lowed him only because they chose his leadership. His authority and
right of command extended no further than to be foremost in danger,,
most cunning in savage strategy, bravest in battle. So of all the
relations of Indian life. The Medicine Man was a self-constituted
physician and prophet. No man gave him his authority; no man took
it away. His right was his own ; and his influence depended upon
himself and the voluntary respect of the nation. In the solemn de-
bates of the Council House, where the red orators pronounced their
wild harangues to groups of motionless listeners, only questions of
expediency were decided. The painted sachems never thought of
imposing on the unwilling minority the decision which had been
reached in council.
Next among the propensities of the Red men was the passion
for war. Their wars, however, were always undertaken for the re-
dress of grievances, real or imaginary, and not for conquest. But
with the Indian, a redress of grievances meant a personal, vindictive,
and bloody vengeance on the offender. The Indian's principles of
war were easily understood, but irreconcilable with justice and hu-
manity. The forgiveness of an injury was reckoned a weakness and
a shamer Revenge was considered among the nobler virtues. The
open, honorable battle of the field was an event unknown in Indian.
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CnicUakAs /J'/f ■ /;^ — ---s!v>
CB^ctas\|;>i, / Jj ^ iMlilM
30
'S-
G TT Z F
Mm^
K
o <
31 :e X I ^'
^^OV^^GINAL AMERICA
SHOWIIfO THE
DISTRIBUTION AND TERRITORIAL LIMITS
^^£ INDIAN! NAT\0^^'^
m THE NEW WORLD,
SCAI.K OP WILES
100
iOO
300
^
400
500
West 95 from Greenwich
80
76
ABORIGINAL AMERIGA.
45
warfare. Fighting was limited to the surprise, the ambuscade, the
massacre ; and military strategy consisted of cunning and treachery.
Quarter was rarely asked, and never granted ; those who were spared
from the fight were only reserved for a barbarous captivity, ransom,
or the stake. In the torture of his victims all the diabolical ferocity
of the savasre warrior's nature burst forth without restraint.
In times of peace the Indian character shone to a better advan-
tage. But the Ked man was, at his best estate, an unsocial, solitary,
and gloomy spirit.
He was a man of
the woods. He
communed only
with himself and
the genius of sol-
itude. He sat
apart. The forest
was better than
his wigwam, and
his wigwam bet-
ter than the vil-
lage. The Indian
woman was a de-
graded creature, a
drudge, a beast
of burden ; and
the social prin-
ciple was c o r -
respondingly low.
The organization
of the Indian fam-
ily was so peculiar
as to require a special consideration. Among civilized nations the
family is so constructed that the lines of kinshij) diverge constantly
from the line of descent, so that collateral kinsmen with each gen-
eration stand at a still greater remove from each other. The above
diagram will serve to show how in a European family the lines of
consanguinity diverge until the kinship becomes so feeble as to be no
longer recognized. It will be observed that this fact of constant di-
vergence is traceable to the establishment of a male line of descent.
In the Indian family all this is reversed. The descent is es-
tablished in the female line; and as a consequence the ties of kinship
DIAGRAM OF EUROPEAN KINSHIP.
46
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
converge upon each other until they all meet in the granddaughter.
That is, in the aboriginal nations of North America, every grandson
and granddaughter was the grandson and granddaughter of the whole
tribe. This arose from the fact that all the uncles of a given person
were reckoned as his fathers also ; all the mother's sisters were mothers ;
all the cousins were sisters and brothers; all the nieces were daugh-
ters ; all the nephews, sons, etc. This peculiarity of the Indian family
organization is illustrated in the annexed diagram.
Civil government
among the Indian na-
tions was in its primi-
tive stages of develop-
ment. Each tribe had
its own sachem, or
chieftain, to whom in
matters of peace and
war a tolerable degree
of obedience was ren-
dered. At times con-
federations were form-
ed, based either on ties
of kinship or the exi-
gencies of war. But
these confederations
were seldom enduring,
and were likely at any
time to be broken up
by the barbarous pas-
sion and insubordina-
tion of the tribes who
composed them. Sometimes a sachem would arise with such marked
abilities, warlike prowess, and strength of will, as to gain an influence,
if not a positive leadership over many nations. But with the death of
the chieftain, or sooner, each tribe, resuming its independence, would
return to its own ways. No general Indian Congress was known; but
national and tribal councils were frequently called to debate questions
of policy and right.
In matters of religion the Indians were a superstitious race, but
seldom idolaters. They believed in a great spirit, everywhere present,
ruling the elements, showing favor to the obedient, and punishing the
sinful. Him they worshiped; to him they sacrificed. But not in tem-
DIAGRAM OF INDIAN KINSHIP.
ABOBIOINAL AMERICA. 47
pies, for the Indians built none. They also believed in many subordi-
nate spirits — some good, some bad. Both classes frequented the earth.
The bad spirits brought evil dreams to the Indian ; diseases also, bad
passions, cruel winters, and starvation. The good spirits brought sun-
shine, peace, plentiful harvests, all the creatures of the chase. The
Medicine Man, or Prophet, obtained a knowledge of these things by
fasting and prayer, and then made revelations of the will and purposes
of the spirit world. The religious ceremonies of the Indians were per-
formed with great earnestness and solemn formality.
In the matter of the arts the Indian was a barbarian. His house
was a wigwam or hovel. Some poles set up in a circle, converging at
the top, covered with skins and the branches of trees, lined and some-
times floored with mats, a fire in the center, a low opening opposite
the point from which the wind blew — such was the aboriginal abode
of North America. Indian utensils were few, rude, and primitive.
Poorly-fashioned earthen pots, bags and pouches for carrying provis-
ions, and stone hammers for pounding parched corn, were the stock
and store. A copper kettle was a priceless treasure. The warrior's
chief implement was his hatchet of stone or copper. This he always
carried with him, and it was rarely free from the stain of blood. His
weapon of offence and defence was the bow and arrow, by no means
an insignificant or feeble instrument. The arrow pointed with stone
or iron was frequently driven entirely through the ponderous buffalo.
The range of the winged missile was two hundred yards or more, and
the aim was one of fatal accuracy when the White man was the tar-
get. The Indian's clothing was a blanket, thrown over his shoulders,
bound around him perhaps with a thong of leather. The material for
his moccasins * and leggins was stripped from the red buck, elk, or
buffalo. He was fond of hanging about his person an infinity of non-
sensical trappings ; fangs of rattlesnakes, claws of hawks, feathers of
eagles, bones of animals, scalps of enemies. He painted his face and
body, specially when the passion of war was on him, with all manner
of glaring and fantastic colors. So the Prophet of his nation taught
him; so he would be terrible to his enemies; so he would exemplify
the peculiarities of his nation and be unlike the Pale face. All the
higher arts were wanting. Indian writing consisted only of quaint
and half-intelligible hieroglyphics rudely scratched on the face of
rocks or cut in the bark of trees. The artistic sense of the savage
could rise no higher than a coarse necessity compelled the flight.
The language spoken by a people is always a matter of special
* The Algonquin word is viaklsin.
48
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
SPECIMEN OF INDIAN WRITING.
interest and importance. The dialects of the North American races
bear many and evident marks of resemblance among themselves; but
little or no analogy to the languages of other nations. If there is any
similarity at all, it is found between the Indian tongues and those
spoken by the
nomadic races
of Asia. The
IpJ^jJ^^jJ ^ |!^ ^ wo \? v7 w VA vocabulary of
the Red men
was a very
limited one.
The principal
objects of na-
ture had spec-
ial names, and
actions were
likewise spe-
cifically e X -
pressed. Ab-
stract ideas but
rarely f o u n d
expression in
any of the Indian languages ; such ideas could only be expressed by
ti long and labored circumlocution. Words had a narrow but very
intense meaning. There was, for instance, no general word signify-
ing to hunt or to fish ; but one word signified " to-kill-a-deer-with-an-
arrow ; " another, " to-take-fish-by-striking-the-ice." In most of the
dialects there was no word for brother; but "elder-brother" and
"younger-brother" could be expressed. Among many of the tribes
the meanings of words and phrases were so restricted that the war-
rior would use one set of terms and the squaw another to express
the same ideas. The languages were monosyllabic ; but many of the
monosyllables might be combined to form compounds resembling the
polysyllables of European tongues. These compounds, expressing ab-
stract and difficult ideas, were sometimes inordinately long,* the whole
ibrming an explanation or description of the thing rather than a sin-
gle word. Scholars have applied the term agglutinative to those lan-
guages in which such labored and tedious forms of expression occur.
Of this sort are the tongues spoken by the nomadic races of Asia.
* For instance, in the Massachusetts dialect, the form of speech meaning "our ques-
Hon" was this: Kum-mog-ko-don-at-toot-tura-moo-et-it-e-a-ong-an-nun-non-ash.
Tramlaiion : Eight soldiers (9), with muskets (10), commanded by a cap-
tain (1), and accompanied by a secretary (2), a geologist (3), three attend-
ants (4, 5, 6), and two Indian guides, encamped here. They had three
camp fires (13, 14, 15), and ate a turtle and a prairie hen (11, 12), for supper.
ABORIGINAL AMERICA.
49
In personal appearance the Indians were strong/y marked. In
statnre they were nearly all below the average of Europeans. The
Esquimaux are rarely five feet high, but are generally thick-set and
heavy. The Algonquins are taller and lighter in build; a straight and
agile race, lean and
swift of foot. Eyes
jet-black and sunk-
en ; hair black and
straight; beard black
and scant; skin
copper-colored, a red-
dish-black, cin-
namon-hued, brown ;
high cheek bones ;
forehead and skull
variable in shape and
proportion; hands
and feet small ; body
lithe but not strong;
expression sinister, or
rarely dignified and
noble : — these are the
well-known features
and person of the
Indian.
Though gener-
ally sedate in man-
ners and serious in
behavior, the Red men at times gave themselves up to merry-making
and hilarity. The dance was universal — not the social dance of civ-
ilized nations, but the dance of ceremony, of religion, and of war.
Sometimes the warriors danced alone, but frequently the women joined
in the wild exercise, circling around and around, chanting the weird,
monotonous songs of the tribes. Many other amusements were com-
mon, such as running, leaping, wrestling, shooting at a mark, racing
in canoes along swift rivers or placid lakes, playing at ball, or en-
gaging in intricate and exciting games, performed with small stones
resembling checkers cr dice. To this latter sport was not unfre-
quently added the intoxication of gambling, in which the warriors,
under the influence of their fierce passion, Avould often hazard and
* An authentic portrait of the celebrated Black Hawk, chief of the Sacs and Foxes.
4
A NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN.-
50 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
lose their entire possessions. In soberer moments, the Red men,
never inclined to conversation, would sit in silence, communing each
with his own thoughts or lost in a dream under the fascination of
his pipe. The use of tobacco was universal and excessive; and after
the introduction of intoxicating liquors by the Europeans the Indi-
ans fell into terrible drunkenness, only limited in its extent by the
amount of spirits which they could procure. It is doubtful whether
any other race has been so awfully degraded by drink.
Such is a brief sketch of the Red man — who was rather than is.
The only hope of the perpetuity of his race seems now to center in
the Choctaws, Cherokees, Creeks and Chickasaws of the Indian Ter-
ritory. These nations, numbering in the aggregate about forty-eight
thousand souls, have attained a considerable degree of civilization ;
and with just and liberal dealing on the part of the Government the
outlook for the future is not discouraging. Most of the other Indian
tribes seem to be rapidly approaching extinction. Right or wrong,
such is the logic of events. Whether the Red man has been justly
deprived of the ownership of the New World will remain a subject
of debate ; that he has been deprived, can be none. The Saxon has
come. His conquering foot has trodden the vast domain from shore to
shore. The weaker race has withered from his presence and sword.
By the majestic rivers and in the depths of the solitary woods the
feeble sons of the Bow and Arrow will be seen no more. Only their
names remain on hill and stream and mountain. The Red man sinks
and fails. His eyes are to the West. To the prairies and forests, the
hunting-grounds of his ancestors, he says farewell. He is gone ! The
cypress and the hemlock sing his requiem.
PART 11.
YOTAGE A.'ND DISCOYEET.
A. ». 986-1607.
CHAPTER II.
THE ICELANDERS AND NORWEGIANS IN AMERICA.
THE western continent was first seen by white men in A. D. 986.
A Norse navigator by the name of Heejulfson, sailing from
Iceland to Greenland, was caught in a storm and driven westward to
Newfoundland or Labrador. Two or three times the shores were
seen, but no landing was made or attempted. The coast was low,
abounding in forests, and so diiferent from the well-known cliffs of
Greenland as to make it certain that another shore hitherto unknown
was in sight. On reaching Greenland, Herjulfson and his companions
told wonderful stories of the new lands seen in the west.
Fourteen years later, the actual discovery of America was made
by Lief Erickson. This noted Icelandic captain, resolving to know
the truth about the country which Herjulfson had seen, sailed west-
ward from Greenland, and in the spring of the year 1001 reached
Labrador. Impelled by a spirit of adventure, he landed with his
companions, and made explorations for a considerable distance along
the coast. The country was milder and more attractive than his own,
and he was in no haste to return. Southward he went as far as
Massachusetts, where the daring company of Norsemen remained for
more than a year. Rhode Island was also visited; and it is alleged
that the hardy adventurers found their way into New York harbor.
What has once been done, whether by accident or design, may
easily be done again. In the years that followed Lief Erickson's dis-
covery, other companies of Norsemen came to the shores of America.
Thorwald, Lief 's brother, made a voyage to Maine and Massachu-
setts in 1002, and is said to have died at Fall River in the latter state.
(51)
i^.
52
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Then another brother, Thorstein by name, arrived with a band of
followers in 1005 ; and in the year 1007, Thoefinn Kaelsefne, the
most distinguished mariner of his day, came with a crew of a hundred
and fifty men, and made explorations along the coast of Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, and per-
haps as far south as the
capes of Virginia. Other
companies of Icelanders
and Norwegians visited
the countries f a r t h e r
north, and planted col-
onies in Newfoundland
and Nova Scotia. Little,
however, was known or
imagined by these rude
sailors of the extent of
the country which they
had discovered. They
supposed that it was only
a portion of Western
Greenland, which, bend-
ing to the north around
an arm of the ocean, had
reappeared in the west.
The settlements which
were made, were feeble and soon broken up. Commerce was au im-
possibility in a country where there were only a few wretched savages
with no disposition to buy and nothing at all to sell. The spirit of
adventure was soon appeased, and the restless Northmen returned to
their own country. To this undefined line of coast, now vaguely
known to them, the Norse sailors gave the name of Vinland; and
the old Icelandic chroniclers insist that it was a pleasant and beauti-
ful country. As compared with their own mountainous and frozen
island of th<3 North, the coasts of New England may well have seemed
delightful.
The men who thus first visited the shores of the New World
were a race of hardy adventurers, as lawless and restless as any that
ever sailed the deep. Their mariners and soldiers penetrated every
clime. The better parts of France and England fell under their do-
minion. All the monarchs of the latter country after AYilliam the
Conqueror — himself the grandson of a sea-king — are descendants of
NORSE EXPLOKATIONS.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY.
53
the Norsemen. They were rovers of the sea ; freebooters and pi-
rates; "warriors audacious and headstrong, wearing hoods surmounted
with eagles' wings and walruses' tusks, mailed armor, and for robes the
skins of polar bears. Woe to the people on whose defenceless coasts
the sea-kings landed with sword and torch! Their wayward life and
ferocious disposition are well portrayed in one of their own old bal-<
lads *
He scorns to rest 'neath the smoky rafter,
He plows with his boat the roaring deep ;
Tlie billows boil and the storm howls after —
But the tempest is only a thing of laughter, —
The sea-king loves it better than sleep !
During the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries occa-
sional voyages continued to be made; and it is said that as late as
A. D. 1347 a Norwegian ship visited Labrador and the north-eastern
parts of the United States. The Norse remains which have been
found at Newport, at Garnet
Point, and several other
places seem to point clearly
to some such events as are
here described; and the Ice-
landic historians give a uni-
form and tolerably consistent
account of these early ex-
ploits of their countrymen.
When the word America is
mentioned in. the hearing of
the Icelandic schoolboys, they
will at once answer, with en-
thusiasm, " Oh, yes ; Lief Er-
ickson discovered that country
in the year 1001."
An event is to be
weighed by its consequences.
From the discovery of Amer-
ica by the Norsemen, nothing
whatever resulted. The
world was neither wiser nor better. Among the Icelanders themselves
the place and the very name of Vinland were forgotten. Europe
never heard of such a country or such a discovery. Historians have
until late years been incredulous on the subject, and the fict is as
though it had never been. The curtain which had been lifted for a
A NORSE SEA-KING OF THE ELEVENTH CENTURY.
54 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
moment was stretched again from sky to sea, and the New World
still lay hidden in the shadows. *
CHAPTER III.
SPANISH DISCO VEBIES IN AMERICA.
IT was reserved for the people of a sunnier clime than Iceland first to
make known to the European nations the existence of a Western con-
tinent. Spain was the happy country under whose auspicious patronage
a new world was to be added to the old ; but the man who was destined
to make the revelation was not himself a Spaniard : he was to come from
genial Italy, the land of olden valor and the home of so much greatness.
Christopher Columbus was the name of that man whom after ages
have justly rewarded with imperishable fame.
The idea that the world is round was not original with Columbus.
Others before him had held a similar belief; but the opinion had been so
feebly and uncertainly entertained as to lead to no practical results.
Copernicus, the PriLssian astronomer, had not yet taught, nor had Galileo,
the great Italian, yet demonstrated, the true system of the universe. The
English traveler, Sir John Mandeville, had declared in the very first
English book that ever was MTitten (A. D. 1356) that the world is a
sphere; that he himself, when traveling northward, had seen the polar
star approach the zenith, and that on going southward the antarctic con-
stellations had risen overhead ; and that it was both possible and practicable
for a man to sail around the world and return to the place of starting :
but neither Sir John himself nor any other seaman of his times was bold
enough to undertake so hazardous an enterprise.! Columbus was,
no doubt, the first practical believer in the theory of circumnaviga-
tion ; and although he never sailed around the world himself, he
demonstrated the possibility of doing so.
* As to the reality of the Norse discoveries in America, the following from Hum-
boldt's Cosmos, Vol. II., pp. 269-272, may be cited as conclusive : " We are here on
historical ground. By the critical and highly praiseworthy efforts of Professor Rafn
and the Royal Society of Antiquaries in Copenhagen, the Sagas and documents in
regard to the expeditions of the Norsemen to Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and
Vinland have been published and satisfactorily commented upon. « * « » The dis-
covery of the iiorthei-n part of Amenca by the Norsemen can not be disputed. The length
of the voyage, the direction in which they sailed, the time of the sun's rining and
setting, are accurately given. While the Caliphate of Bagdad was still flourish-
ing^ •» » «■ * America was discovered about the year A. D. 1000, by Lief, the son
of Eric the Red, at the latitude of forty-one and a-half degrees north."
t See Appendix A.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY.
55
The great mistake with Columbus and others who shared his opinions
was not concerning the figure of the earth, but in regard to its size. He
believed the world to be no more than ten thousand or twelve thousand
miles in circumference. He therefore confidently expected that after sail-
ing about three thousand miles to the westward he should arrive at the
East Indies ; and to do that was the one great purpose of his life.
Christopher Columbus was born at Genoa, a seacoast to\\Ti of North-
western Italy, in A. D. 1435. He was carefully educated, and then devoted
himself to the sea. His
ancestors had been sea-
men before him. His
o^^^l inclination as well
as his early training
made him a sailor.
For twenty years he
traversed the Mediter-
ranean and the parts
of the Atlantic adjacent
to Europe; he visited
Iceland; then went to
Portugal, and finally
to S]>ain. The idea
of reaching the Indies
by crossing the Atlan-
tic had already pos-
sessed him. For more
than ten years the poor
enthusiast was a beg-
CHIIISTOPHER COLtTMBUS.
gar, going from court
to court, explaining to dull monarchs and bigoted monks the figure cf
the earth and the ease with which the rich islands of the East might be
reached by sailing westward. He found one appreciative listener, after-
ward his constant and faithful friend — the noble and sympathetic Isa-
bella, queen of Castile. Be it never forgotten that to the faith, and
insight, and decision of a woman the final success of Columbus must be
attributed.
On the morning of the 3d day of August, 1492, Columbus, with
his three ships, left the harbor of Palos. After seventy-one days of
sailing, in the early dawn of October 12, Hodrigo Triana, who chanced
to be on the lookout from the Pinta, set up a shout of '^Land!'' A gun
was fired as the signal. The ships lay to. There was music and jubilee ;
56 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and just at sunrise Columbus himself first stepped ashore, shook out the
royal banner of Castile in the presence of the wondering natives, and
named the island San Salvador. During the three remaining months
of this first voyage the islands of Concepcion, Cuba and Hayti were
added to the list of discoveries ; and on the bay of Caracola, in the lasfc=
named island, was erected out of the timbers of the Santa Maria a fortj
the first structure built by Europeans in the New World. In the early
part of January, 1493, Columbus sailed for Spain, where he arrived in
March, and was everywhere greeted with rejoicings and applause.
In September of the following autumn Columbus sailed on his second
voyage. He still believed that by this route westward he should reach,
if indeed he had not already reached, the Indies. The result of the
second voyage was the discovery of the Windward group and the islands
of Jamaica and Porto Rico. It was at this time that the first colony was
established in Hayti and Columbus's brother appointed governor. After
an absence of nearly three years, Columbus returned to Spain in the sum-
mer of 1496 — returned to find himself the victim of a thousand bitter
jealousies and suspicions. All the rest of his life was clouded with perse-
cutions and misfortunes. He made a third voyage, discovered the island
of Trinidad and the mainland of South America, near the mouth of the
Orinoco. Thence he sailed back to Hayti, where he found his colony
disorganized ; and here, while attempting to restore order, he was seized
by Bobadilla, an agent of the Spanish government, put in chains and car-
ried to Spain. After a disgraceful imprisonment, he was liberated and
sent on a fourth and last voyage in search of the Indies ; but besides
making some explorations along the south side of the Gulf of Mexico,
the expedition accomplished nothing, and Columbus, overwhelmed with
discouragements, returned once more to his ungrateful country. The
good Isabella was dead, and the great discoverer found himself at last a
friendless and despised old man tottering into the grave. Death came,
and fame afterward.
Of all the wrongs done to the memory of Columbus, perhaps
the greatest was that which robbed him of the name of the new conti-
nent. This was bestowed upon one of the least worthy of the many
adventurers whom the genius and success of Columbus had drawn to the
West. In the year 1499, Amerigo Vespucci, a Florentine navigator
of some daring but no great celebrity, reached the eastern coast of South
America. It does not appear that his explorations there Avere of any
great importance. Two years later he made a second voyage, and then
hastened home to give to Euro])e the first published account of the
Western World. Vespucci's only merit consisted in his recognition of
lOOO
Central I'oriod of
the 31iil<lle Ages.
1i. Coiiratl II.
Th
99.
35. XTiiion of C
IIOO
1200
1300
80. The Kill:
39. Henry the
Blaek.
52. Frederick Barbarossa.
e CRUSADES.
The Kiiigdoui of Jerusalem established.
astile and L.eoii.
8. LiOiiis VI.
56. Henry IV.
HOUSE OF CAPET IN
FKANCE.
26. l.ouis IX.
85. Philip IT.
16. PIi
The different Orders of Knighthood establi^
37. LiOiiis VII.
71. Coiiq
17 Canute. so. Ph
40. If ardieau lite.
42. EdwartI Ithe Confessor.
66. Harohl. 3s. strug;@:ie of
66. Will lani I.
35. Stephen.
'William Riifu»>.
Henry I.
54. Henry
89.
99.
The PLANTAGENETS.
87.
DANISH KINGS IN
ENGiiAND,
The NORMANS.
1. LEIF ER1CK80S, an Icelandic
navigiitor, sailing westward
from Greenland, discovers
the coast of Labrador, and
makes explorations !is far
south as Khode l.sland.
Bjarne Herjnlfson driven
by cL storm within sij;ht of
the American coast A. I>.
9»i«.
2. I'horivald Erickson re-
turns to America and re-
mains three years.
5. Tliorstein Erickson co
nest of Ireland,
ilip II.
the Gnelphs and dihibel lines.
Wars of the ISaronsJ
28.
15. !Magna Cliarta
II.
Ricliaril I.
John.
Heroic Age.
grante
72. Edward I,
7. Edna
W
THE WESTERN CONTINENT UNKNOWN
21. Erik ITpsi sent as
mes to America.
7. Thorlinn Karlsefne ex plores the coastof Massachusetts.
11. Expedition of Freydls
AMERICA
to Vinland.
70. Allege
TO TH
UNDER
1 discovery of America by 9Ia doc the \N'
THE ABORIG
JO IPt J%. lO ~V I
X_v jCjC -ctL Xv Ji X»
PERIOD OF VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY.
A. D. 986-1607.
Icelandic discoTerles in gr^
Spanish " " ye'
Knollsh " " ra
Fkknch " " Wh
OuTCH '* *' hr
PORTUGUSSK " " pVi
1400
1500
HiOO
>m of Jeru Maleui overtliro^ii. I
:::,. C'uliinihus born.
15. John llii>^$>).
ok written in Eii;;
56. Fir*it bo
Ii»tii, ill
Mandevil
figure of
bility of
which the author, Sir John
le, declares the spherical
the eartli and the practica-
eircumnavigatioii.
'J8.
80. ,€h
"••*"^^'- Innttr.g
► V.
11-31. Joan of Are.
(I.
USE OF
A.LOIS.
■2-2. Charles VII.
61. liOnls
77. Bic
harU II.
99.
[I.
litre.
[ward III.
Wars of the Roses.
he LAN CASTERS.
74. Fer
The
a3. H
The YOKKS.I
Henry IV.
13. Henry V.
22. Henry VI.
61. £4lwar«i
83. E
83. K
l>c tiiaina doubles the Cape
of Good Hope and reaches
the liast Indies.
I><iither.
Jnbcntrti.
The Keforuiat ion.
XI.
9. John Calvin.
12. St. Uartlioloinew.
i->. Francis I.
Henry IV.
IS. TreaSy of
Westphalia.
89.
1.). C'harles V.
«linan<l and Isabella.
TUDORS.
The PURITANS
enry VII.
9. Ileury VIII.
47. £(luard VI.
53. Mary.
IV.
uwar«i V. .^s Klizaheth.
ieliar«l III.
10. I^ouis XIII.
43.I..OIlisXIT
3. Jaiiies I.
25. C'harles I.
The STUARTS.
:UROPEAN NATIONS.
0. The great pi
Greenland,
cation with
A company of
lAL
ague depopulates Iceland,
and Vinland; communi-
the New World is cut oft
93. IColllUlbus discovers the
93. Second voyage.
98. Third voyage.
Discovers America.
99. AineriK'o '^'espneoi makes
12. I>e I^eon explores Flori
20. Corioz, coiujucrs Mex
25. I>e Aylloii in Caro
28. I»e Xarvaeas mak
39. I>e .Solo in Am
Cm. Melen
97.
98.
Norsemen in America.
TRIBES.
West Indies,
Col
John Cabot discovers No
Sebastian Cabot explores
7S. Ma
79. I)r
83. 4.i
K
11 ill bus visits Iceland and
leanis of the New World.
a voyage to South America.
da.
ico.
liiia.
.es explorations in Florida.
'erica,
«le* founds St Augustine
rth America,
tlic American const.
rtiii Frobisher'N voyages.
«ke (111 the Pacific coast.
ilbert'N voyage. [tion.
al<>iK:h*N attempts at coloniza-
2. t^OMiioIirN direct voyage.
3. I'rinjr's voy:ii.'e.
7. Setlleiiieiit at JaineMlowil
8. Waynioiith in Maine.
20. Till' i'lirilaiiN at
I'lynioiilh.
24. Verraz.xaiil cxplor
34. Carli«'r's exped
42. Kolterval in
6-'. Kibanlt
6-1. LMiitIo
98.
1
cs the American coast
ition.
I Canada.
' with the Til- - ■ ■-•.
■iiiier<''M <
lilt Kochf .~^cotia.
4. I>e .MoiitN and Cham-
plain.
5. I*«»rt Koyai fuiimlcd.
8. Koiiiidiiig of 4(nebee.
9. Hn4l<ion in America,
14. K.xplomiions nf Itloek
ainl .May.
14. Foundiii.: Ml %«'w .iin-
ster«lani.
1. Voyages of the ^'orlereals.
19. Matrellan eireiiiiinav ii;iite.« ;
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 57
the fact that the recent discoveries were not a portion of that Inuia already
known, but were in reality another continent. In his published narrative
all reference to Columbus was carefully omitted ; and thus tlirough his
own craft, assisted by the unappreciative dullness of the times, the name
of this Vespucci rather than that of the true discoverer was given to the
New World.
The discovery of America produced great excitement throughout
the states of Western Europe. In Spain especially there was wonderful
zeal and enthusiasm. Within ten years after the death of Columbus, the
principal islands of the West Indies were explored and colonized. In the
year 1510 the Spaniards planted on the Isthmus of Darien their first con-
tinental colony. Three years later, Vasco Nunez de Balboa, the
governor of the colony, learning from the natives that another ocean lay
only a short distance to the westward, crossed the isthmus and from an
eminence looked down upon the Pacific. Not satisfied with merely seeing
the great water, he waded in a short distance, and drawing his sword
after the pompous Spanish fashion, took possession of the ocean in the
name of the king of Spain.
Meanwhile, Juan Ponce de Leon, who had been a companion
of Columbus on his second voyage, fitted out a private expedition of dis-
covery and adventure. De Leon had grown rich as governor of Porto
Rico, and while growing rich had also grown old. But there was a foun-
tain of perpetual youth somewhere in the Bahamas — so said all the learn-
ing and intelligence of Spain — and in that fountain the Avrinkled old
cavalier would bathe and be young again. So in the year 1512 he set
sail from Porto Rico ; and stopping first at San Salvador and the neighbor-
ing islands, he came, on Easter_Sunday;, the_27th of March^ in sight of an
unknown shore. He supposed that another island more beautiful than
the rest was discovered. There were waving forests, green leaves, birds
of song and the fragrance of blossoms. Partly in honor of the day, called
in the ritual of the Church Pascua Florida, and partly to describe the
delightfiil landscape that opened on his sight, he named the new shore
Florida — the Land of Flowers.
After a few days a landing was effected a short distance north of
where, a half century later, were laid the foundations of St. Augustine.
The country was claimed for the king of Spain, and the search for the
youth -restoring fountain was eagerly prosecuted. The romantic adven-
turer turned southward, explored the coast for many leagues, discovered
and named the Tortugas, doubled Cape Florida, and then sailed back to
Porto Rico, not perceptibly younger than when he started.
The king of Spain rewarded Ponce with the governorship of his
58 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Laud of Flowers, and sent him thither again to establish a colony. The
aged veteran did not, however, reach his province until the year 1521,
and then it was only to find the Indians in a state of bitter hostility.
Scarcely had he landed when they fell upon him in a furious battle;
many of the Spaniards were killed outriaht. and thp rest had to betake
themselves to the ships for safety. Pouce de Leon himself received a
mortal wound from an arrow, and was carried back to Cuba to die.
CHAPTER IV.
SPANISH DISCOVERIES IN AMERICA.— CONTINUED.
THE year 1517 was marked by the discovery of Yucatan and the Bay
of Campeachy by Fernandez de Cordova. While exploring the
northern coast of the country, his company was attacked by the natives,
and he himself mortally wounded. During the next year the coast of
Mexico was explored for a great distance by Grijalva, assisted by Ccr-
lova's pilot; and in the year 1519, Fernando Cortez landed with his
fleet at Tabasco and began his famous conquest of Mexico.
As soon as the news of the invasion spread abroad, the subjects
of the Mexican empire were thrown into consternation. Armies of
native warriors gathered to resist the progress of the Spaniards, but
were dispersed by the invaders. After freeing the coast of his oppo-
nents, Cortez proceeded westward to Vera Cruz, a seaport one hun-
dred and eighty miles south-east of the Mexican capital. Here he
was met by ambassadors from the celebrated Montezuma, emperor
of the country. From him they delivered messages and exhibited
great anxiety lest Cortez should march into the interior. He as-
sured them that such was indeed his purpose; that his business in
the country was urgent; and that he must confer with Montezuma
in person.
The ambassadors tried in vain to dissuade the terrible Spaniard.
They made him costly presents, and then hastened back to their
alarmed sovereign. Montezuma immediately despatched them a sec-
ond time with presents still more valuable, and with urgent appeals
to Cortez to proceed no farther. But the cupidity of the Spaniards
was now inflamed to the highest pitch, and burning their ships behind
them, they began theii /harch towards the capital. The Mexican em-
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY.
59
peror by his messengers forbade their approach to his city. Still they
pressed on. The nations tributary to Montezuma threw off their al-
legiance, made peace with the conqueror, and even joined his stand-
ard. The irresolute and vacillating Indian monarch knew not what
to do. The Span-
iards came in si^ht
of the city — a glit-
tering and splen-
did vision of spires
and temples ; and
the poor Montezu-
ma came forth to
receive his remorse-
less enemies. On
the morning of the
8th of November,
1519, the Spanish
army marched over
the causeway lead-
ing into the Mexi-
can capital and was
(Juartered in the
great central square
near the temple of
the Aztec god of
war.
It was now winter time. For a month Cortez remained quietly
in the city. He was permitted to go about freely with his soldiers,
and was even allowed to examine the sacred altars and shrines where
human sacrifices were daily offered up to the deities of Mexico. He
made himself familiar with the defences of the capital and the INIex-
ican mode of warfare. On every side he found inexhaustible stores
of provisions, treasures of gold and silver, and what greatly excited
his solicitude, arsenals filled with bows and javelins. But although
surrounded with splendor and abundance, his own situation became
extremely critical. The millions of natives who swarmed around him
were becoming familiar with his troops and no longer believed them
immortal. There were mutterings of an outbreak which threatened to
overwhelm him in an hour. In this emergency Ibe Spanish general
adopted the bold and unscrupulous expedient of seizing Montezuma
and holding him as a hostage. A plausible pretext for this outrage
was found in thQ fact that the IMexican governor of the province
FERNANDO CORTEZ.
60 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
adjacent to Vera Cruz had attacked the Spanish garrison at that place,
and that Montezuma himself had acted with hostility and treachery
towards the Spaniards while they were marching on the city. As soon
as the emperor was in his power, Cortez compelled him to acknowledge
himself a vassal of the king of Spain and to agree to the payment of
a sum amounting to six million three hundred thous|ind dollars, with
an annual tribute afterwards.
In the mean time, Velasquez, the Spanish governor of Cuba,
jealous of the fame of Cortez, had despatched a force to Mexico to
arrest his progress and to supersede him in the command. The ex-
pedition was led by Pamphilo de Narvaez, the same who was
afterwards governor of Florida. His forces consisted of more than
twelve hundred well armed and well disciplined soldiers, besides a
thousand Indian servants and guides. But the vigilant Cortez had
meanwhile been informed by messengers from Vera Cruz of the
movement which his enemies at home had set on foot against him,
and he determined to sell his command only at the price of his own
life and the lives of all his followers. He therefore instructed Al-
varado, one of his subordinate officers, to remain in the capital with
a small force of a hundred and forty men ; and with the remainder,
numbering less than two hundred, he himself hastily withdrew from
the city and proceeded by a forced march to encounter De Narvaez
on the sea-coast. On the night of the f6th of May, 1520, while the
soldiers of the latter were quietly asleep in their camp near Vera
Cruz, Cortez burst upon them with the fury of despair, and before
they could rally or well understand the terrible onset, compelled the
whole force to surrender. Then, adding the general's skill to the
warrior's prowess, he succeeded in inducing the conquered army, to
join his own standard ; and with his forces thus augmented to six
times their original numbers he began a second time his march to-
wards the capital.
While Cortez was absent on this expedition, the Mexicans of
the capital rose in arms, and the possession of the country was staked
on the issue of war. Alvarado, either fearing a revolt or from a
spirit of atrocious cruelty, had attacked the Mexicans while they
were celebrating one of their festivals, and slain five hundred of the
leaders and priests. The people in a frenzy of astonishment and rage
flew to their arms and laid siege to the palace where Alvarado and
his men were fortified. The Spaniards were already hard pressed
when Cortez at the head of his new army reached the city. He en-
tered without oj)position and joined Alvarado's command ; but the
passions of the Mexicans were now thoroughly aroused, and not all
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY, 61
the diplomacy of the Spanish general could again bring them into
subjection. In a few days the conflict began in earnest. The streets
were deluged with the blood of tens of thousands; and not a few of
the Spaniards fell before the vengeance of the native warriors. For
months there was almost incessant fighting in and around the city ; and
it became evident that the Spaniards must ultimately be overwhelmed
and destroyed.
To save himself from his peril, Cortez adopted a second shame-
less expedient, more wicked than the first. Montezuma was compelled
to go upon the top of the palace in front of the great square where the
besiegers were gathered and to counsel them to make peace with the
Spaniards. For a moment there was universal silence, then a murmur
of vexation and rage, and then Montezuma was struck down by the
javelins of his own subjects. In a few days he died of wretchedness
and despair, and for a while the warriors, overwhelmed with remorse,
abandoned the conflict. But with the renewal of the strife Cortez was
obliged to leave the city. Finally a great battle was fought, and the
Spanish arms and valor triumphed. In the crisis of the struggle the
sacred Mexican banner was struck down and captured. Dismay seized
the hosts of puny warriors, and they fled in all directions. In De-
cember of 1520, Cortez again marched on the capital. A siege, last-
ing until August of the following year, ensued; and then the famous
city yielded. The empire of the Montezumas was overthrown, and
Mexico became a Spanish province.
Among the many daring enterprises which marked the beginning
of the sixteenth century, that of Ferdinand Magellan is worthy
of special mention. A Portuguese by birth, a navigator by profession,
this man, so noted for extraordinary boldness and ability, determined
to discover a south-west rather than a north-west passage to Asia.
With this object in view, he appealed to the king of Portugal for
ships and men. The monarch listened coldly, and did nothing to
give encouragement. Incensed at this treatment, Magellan threw ofl"
his allegiance, went to Spain — the usual resort of disappointed sea-
men— and laid his plans before Charles V. The emperor caught
eagerly at the opportunity, and ordered a fleet of five ships to be im-
mediately fitted at the public expense and properly manned with
crews.
The voyage was begun from Seville in August of 1519. Sailing
southward across the equinoctial line, Magellan soon reached the coast
of South America, and spent the autumn in explorations, hoping to find
some strait that should lead him westward into that ocean which Balboa
had discovered six years previously. Not at first successful in this effort,
62 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
he passed the winter — which was summer on that side of the equator — •
somewhere on the coast of Brazil. Kenewing his voyage southward, he
came at last to the eastern mouth of that strait which still bears the name
of its discoverer, and passing through it found himself in the open and
boundless ocean. The weather was beautiful, and the peaceful deep was
called the Pacific.
Setting his prows to the north of west, Magellan now held steadily
on his course for nearly four months, suffering much meanwhile from
want of water and scarcity of provisions. In March of 1520 he came to
the group of islands called the Ladrones, situated about midway between
Australia and Japan. Sailing still westward, he reached the Philippine
group, where he was killed in a battle with the natives. But the fleet was
now less than four hundred miles from China, and the rest of the route
was easy. A new captain was chosen, and the voyage continued by way
of the Moluccas, where a cargo of spices was taken on board for the market
of AVestern Europe. Only a single ship was deemed in a fit condition to
venture on the homeward voyage ; but in this vessel the crews embarked,
and returning by way of the Cape of Good Hope arrived in Spain on the
17th day of September, 1522. The circumnavigation of the globe, long
believed in as a possibility, had now become a thing of reality. The
theory of the old astronomers, of Mandeville and of Columbus had
been proved by actual demonstration.
The next important voyage undertaken to the shores of America was
in the year 1520. Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon, who had been a judge
in St. Domingo and had acquired great riches, conducted the expedition.
He and six other wealthy men, eager to stock their plantations with slaves,
determined to do so by kidnapping natives from the neighboring Bahamas.
Two vessels were fitted out for the purpose, and De Ayllon commanded
in person. When the vessels %vere nearing their destination, they encoun-
tered a storm which drove them northward about a hundred and fifty
leagues, and brought them against the coast of South Carolina. The ships
entered St. Helena Sound and anchored in the mouth of the Cambahee
River. The name of Chicora was given to the country, and the river was
called the Jordan. The timid but friendly natives, as soon as their fears
had subsided, began to make presents to the strangers and to treat them
with great cordiality. They flocked on board the ships ; and w^hen the
decks were crowded, De Ayllon, watching his opportunity, weighed
anchor and sailed away. A few days afterward an avenging storm sent
one of the ships to the bottom of the sea, and death came mercifully to
most of the poor wretches who were huddled under the hatches of the
other.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 63
Going at once to Spain, De Ayllon repeated the story of his exploit
to Charles V., who rewarded him with the governorship of Chicora and
the privilege of conquest. Returning to his province in 1525, he found
the natives intensely hostile. His best ship ran aground in the mouth
of the Jordan, and the outraged Indians fell upon him with fury, killing
many of the treacherous crew, and making the rest glad enough to get
away with their lives. De Ayllon himself returned to St. Domingo
humiliated and ruined. Thus ended the first disgraceful effort to enslave
the Indians.
In the year 1526, Charles V. appointed the unprincipled Pamphilo
DE Narvaez governor of Florida, and to the appointment was added
the usual privilege of conquest. The territory thus placed at his disposal
extended from Cape Sable fully three-fifths of the way around the Gulf
of Mexico, and was limited on the south-west by the mouth of the River
of Palms. With this extensive commission De Narvaez arrived at Tampa
Bay in the month of April, 1528. His force consisted of two hundred
and sixty soldiers and forty horsemen. The natives treated them with
suspicion, and, anxious to be rid of the intruders, began to hold up their
gold trinkets and to point to the north. The hint was eagerly caught at
by the avaricious Spaniards, whose imaginations were set on fire mth the
sight of the precious metal. They struck boldly into the forests, expect-
ing to find cities and empires, and found instead swamps and savages.
They reached the Withlacoochie and crossed it by swimming, they passed
over the Suwanee in a canoe which they made for the occasion, and finally
came to Apalachee, a squalid village of forty cabins. This, then, was the
mighty city to which their guides had directed them.
Oppressed with fatigue and goaded by hunger, they plunged again
into the woods, wading through lagoons and assailed by lurking savages,
until at last they reached the sea at the harbor of St. Mark's. Here they
expected to find their ships, but not a ship was there, or had been. With
great labor they constructed some brigantines, and put to sea in the vain
hope of reaching the Spanish settlements in Mexico. They were tossed
by storms, driven out of sight of land and then thrown upon the shore
again, drowned, slain by the savages, left in the solitary woods dead of
starvation and despair, until finally four miserable men of all the adven-
turous company, under the leadership of the heroic De Vaca, first lieu-
tenant of the expedition, were rescued at the village of San Miguel, on
the Pacific coast, and conducted to the city "of Mexico. The story can
hardly be paralleled in the annals of suffering and peril.
But the ^feBJ5pdb-were not yet satisfied. In the yeai* 1537 a new
expedition was planned which surpassed all the others in the bril-
64 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
liancy of its beginning and the disasters of its end. The most cavaliei
of the cavaliers was Ferdinand de Soto, of Xeres. Besides the dis-
tinction of a noble birth, he had been the lieutenant and bosom friend of
Pizarro, and had now returned from Peru loaded with wealth. So great
was his popularity in Spain that he had only to demand what he would
have of the emperor that his request might be granted. At his own dic-
tation he was accordingly appointed governor of Cuba and Florida, with
the privilege of exploring and conquering the latter country at his pleasure.
A great company of young Si)aniards, nearly all of them wealthy and
liigh-born, flocked to his standard. Of these he selected six hundred of
the most gallant and daring. They were clad in costly suits of armor
of the knightly pattern, with airy scarfs and silken embroidery and all
the trappings of chivalry. Elaborate preparations were made for the
grand conquest ; arms and stores were provided ; shackles were wrought
for the slaves ; tools for the forge and workshop were abundantly sup-
plied ; bloodhounds were bought and trained for the work of hunting
fugitives ; cards to keep the young knights excited with gaming ; twelve
priests to conduct religious ceremonies ; and, last of all, a drove of swine
to fatten on the maize and mast of the country.
When, after a year of impatience and delay, everything was at last
in readiness, the gay Castilian squadron, ten vessels in all, left the harbor
of San Lucar to conquer imaginary empires in the New World. The fleet
touched at Havana, and the enthusiasm was kindled even to a higher
pitch than it had reached in Spain. De Soto left his wife to govern Cuba
daring liis absence ; and after a prosperous and exulting voyage of two
weelcs, the ships cast anchor in Tampa Bay. This was in the early part
of June, 1539. When some of the Cubans who had joined the expedition
first saw the silent forests and gloomy morasses that stretched before them,
they were terrified at the prospect, and sailed back to the security of home ;
but De Soto and his cavaliers despised such cowardice, and began their
march into the interior. During the months of July, August and Sep-
tember they marched to the northward, wading through swamps, swim-
ming rivers and fighting the Indians. In October they arrived at the
country of the Apalachians, on the left bank of Flint River, where
they determined to spend the winter. For four months they remained in
thLs locality, sending out exploring parties in various directions. One of
these companies reached the gulf at Pensacola, and made arrangements
that supplies should be sent out from Cuba to that place during the fol-
lowing summer.
f
In the early spring the Spaniards left their winter quarters and con-
tinued their march to the north and east An Indian guide told them of
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 65
ai powerful and populous empire in that direction ; a woman was empress,
and the land was full of gold. A Spanish soldier, one of the men of
Narvaez, who had been kept a captive among the Indians, denied the
truth of the extravagant story ; but De Soto only said that he would find
gold or see poverty with his own eyes, and the freebooters pressed on
through the swamps and woods. It was April, 1540, when they came
upon the Ogechee River. Here they were delayed. The Indian guide
went mad ; and when the priests had conjured the evil spirit out of him,
he repaid their benevolence by losing the whole company in the forest.
By the 1st of May they had reached South CaroHna, and were within a
two days' march of where De Ayllon had lost his ships and men at the
mouth of the Jordan. Thence the wanderers turned westward ; but that
De Soto and his men crossed the mountains into North Carolina and Ten-
nessee is hardly to be believed. They seem rather to have passed across
Northern Georgia from the Chattahouche to the upper tributaries of the
Coosa, and thence down that river to the valleys of Lower Alabama.
Here, just above the confluence of the Alabama and the Tombecbee, they
came upon the fortified Indian town called Mauville, or Mobile, where a
terrible battle was fought with the natives. The town was set on fire,
and two thousand five hundred of the Indians were killed or burned to
death. Eighteen of De Soto's men were killed, and a hundred and fifty
wounded. The Spaniards also lost about eighty horses and all of their
baggage.
The ships of supply had meanwhile arrived at Pensacola, but De
Soto and his men, although in desperate circumstances, were too stubborn
and proud to avail themselves of help or even to send news of their where-
abouts. They turned resolutely to the north ; but the country was poor,
and their condition grew constantly worse and worse. By the middle of
December they had reached the country of the Chickasas, in Northern
Mississippi. They crossed the Yazoo; the weather was severe; snow
fell ; and the Spaniards were on the point of starvation. They succeeded,
however, in finding some fields of ungathered maize, and then came upon
a deserted Indian village which promised them shelter for the winter.
After remaining here till February, 1541, they were suddenly attacked in
the dead of night by the Indians, who, at a preconcerted signal, set the
town on fire, determined then and there to make an end of the desolating
foreigners ; but the Spanish weapons and discipline again saved De Soto
and his men from destruction.
After gathering provisions and reclothing themselves as well as pos-
sible, the Spaniards set out again in early spring to journey still farther
"westward. The guides now brought them to the ISIississippi. The point
6Q HISTORY OF THE UNITED STAXES.
where the majestic Father of Waters was first seen by white men was at
the lower Chickasaw Biuff, a little north of the thirty-fourth parallel of
latitude ; the day of the discovery cannot certainly be known. The In-
dians came down the river in a fleet of canoes, and offered to carry the
Spaniards over ; but the horses could not be transported until barges were
built for that purpose. The crossing was not effected until the latter part
of May.
De Soto's men now found themselves in the land of the Dakotas.
Journeying to the north-west, they passed through a country where wild
fruits were plentiful and subsistence easy. The natives were inoffensive
and superstitious. At one place they were going to worship the woe-
begone cavaliers as the children of the gods, but De Soto was too good a
Catholic to permit such idolatry. The Spaniards continued their march
until they reached the St. Francis River, which they crossed, and gained
the southern limits of Missouri, in the vicinity of New Madrid. Thence
westward the march was renewed for about two hundred miles; thence
southward to the Hot Springs and the tributaries of the Washita River.
On the banks of this river, at the town of Atiamque, they passed the win-
ter of 1541-42. The Indians were found to be much more civilized than
those east of the Mississippi ; but their civilization did not protect them
in the least from the horrid cruelties which the Spaniards practiced. No
consideration of justice, humanity or mercy moved the stony hearts of
these polite and Christian warriors. Indian towns were set on fire for
sport ; Indian hands were chopped off for a whim ; and Indian captives
bm-ned alive because, under fear of death, they had told a falsehood.
But De Soto's men were themselves growing desperate in their mis-
fortunes. They turned again toward the sea, and passing down the
tributaries of the Washita to the junction of that stream with the Red
River, came upon the Mississippi in the neighborhood of Natchez. The
spirit of De Soto was at last completely broken. The haughty cavalier
bowed his head and became a ptey to melancholy. No more dazzling
visions of Peru and Mexico flitted before his imagination. A malignant
fever seized upon his emaciated frame, and then death. The priests
chanted a requiem, and in the middle of the solemn night his sorrowful
companions put the dead hero's body into a rustic coffin, and rowing out
' a distance from shore sunk it in the Mississippi. Ferdinand de Soto had
found a grave under the rolling waters of the great river with which his
name will be associated for ever.
Before his death, De Soto had named Moscoso as his successor ; and
now, under the leadership of the new governor, the ragged, half-starved
adventurers, in the vain hope of reaching Mexico, turned once more to the
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 67
west. They crossed the country to the upper waters of the Heel River, on
the confines of Texas. Thence they turned northward into the territory
of the Pawnees and the Comanches, ranging the hunting-grounds of
those fierce savages until stopped by the mountains. In December of
1542, after almost endless wanderings and hardships, they came again
to the Mississippi, reaching the now familiar stream a short distance above
the mouth of Red River. They now formed the desperate resolution of
building boats, and thus descending the river to the gulf. They erected
a forge, broke off the fetters of the captives in order to procure iron, sawed
timber in the forest, and at last completed seven brigantines and launched
them. The time thus occupied extended fi'om January to July of 1543.
The Indians of the neighborhood were now for the last time plundered
in order to furnish supplies for the voyage ; and on the 2d day of July
the Spaniards went on board their boats and started for the sea. The dis-
tance was almost five hundred miles, and seventeen days were required to
make the descent. On reaching the Gulf of Mexico, they steered to the
south-west ; and keeping as close to the shore as possible, after fifty-five
days of buifetings and perils along the dangerous coast, they came — three
hundred and eleven famished and heart-broken fugitives — to the settle-
ment at the mouth of the River of Palms; and thus ended the most
marvelous expedition in the early history of our country.
The next attempt by the Spaniards to colonize Florida was in the
year 1565. The enterprise was entrusted to Pedro Melendez, a Span-
ish soldier of ferocious disposition and criminal practices. He was under
sentence to pay a heavy fine at the veiy time when he received his com-
mission from the bigoted Philip II. The contract between that monarch
and Melendez was to the eifect that the latter should within three years
explore the coast of Florida, conquer the country, and plant in some
favorable district a colony of not less than five hundred persons, of whom
one hundred should be married men. Melendez was to receive two hun-
dred and twenty-five square miles of land adjacent to the settlement, and
an annual salary of two thousand dollars. Twenty-five hundred persons
collected around Melendez to join in the expedition. The fleet left Spain
in July, reached Porto Rico early in August, and on the 28th of the same
month came in sight of Florida.
It must now be understood that the real object had in view by
Melendez was to attack and destroy a colony of French Protestants called
Huguenots, who, in the previous year, had made a settlement about tliirty-
five miles above the mouth of the St. John's River. This was, of course,
within the limits of the territory claimed by Spain ; and Melendez at once
oerceived that to extirpate these French heretics in the name of patriotism
68 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and religion would be likely to restore his shattered character and bring'
him into favor again. HLs former crimas were to be washed out in the
blood of the innocents. Moreover, the Catholic party at the French
court had communicated with the Spanish court as to the whereabouts and
intentions of the Huguenots, so that Melendez knew precisely where to
find them and how to compass their destruction.
It was St. Augustine's day when the dastardly Spaniard came in
sight of the shore, but the landing was not effected until the 2d of Sep-
tember. The spacious harbor and the small river which enters it from
the south were named in honor of the saint. On the 8th day of the
same month, Philip II. was proclaimed monarch of all North America ;
a solemn mass was said by the priests ; and there, in the sight of forest, and
sky, and sea, the foundation-stones of the oldest town in the United States
were put into their place. This was seventeen years before the founding
of Santa Fe by Antonio de Espego, and forty-two years before the
settlement at Jamestown.
As soon as the new town was sufficiently advanced to be secure
against accident, Melendez turned his attention to the Huguenots. The
latter were expecting to be attacked, but had supposed that the Spanish
fleet would sail up the St. John's, and make the onset from that direction^
Accordingly, knowing that they must fight or die, all the French vesselu
except two left their covert in the river and put to sea, intending to an-
ticipate the movements of the Spaniards ; but a furious storm arose and
dashed to pieces every ship in the fleet. Most of the crews, however,
reached the shore just above the mouth of the river. Melendez now
collected his forces at St. Augustine, stole through the woods and swamps,,
and falling unexpectedly on the defenceless colony, utterly destroyed
it. IMen, women and children were alike given up to butchery. Two
hundred were killed outright. A few escaped into the forest, Laudonniere,,
the Huguenot leader, among the number, and making their way to thc'
coast, were picked up by the two French ships which had been saved
from the storm.
The crews of the ^vrecked vessels were the next object of Spanish
vengeance. Melendez discovered their whereabouts, and deceiving them
with treacherous promises of clemency, induced them to surrender. They
were ferried across the river in boats ; but no sooner were they completely
in the j)0wer of their enemy than their hands were bound behind them,
and they were driven off, tied two and two, toward St. Augustine. As
they approached the Spanish fort the signal was given by sounding a
trumpet, and the work of slaughter began anevr. Seven hundred defence-
less victims were added to the previous atrocious massacre. Only a few
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 69
mechanics and Catholic servants were left alive. Under these bloody
auspices the first permanent European colony was planted in our country.
In what way the Huguenots were revenged upon their enemies will be
told in another place.
The Spaniards had now explored the entire coast from the Isthmus
of Darien to Port Royal in South Carolina. They were acquainted with
the country west of the Mississippi as far north as New Mexico and
Missouri, and east of that river they had traversed the Gulf States as far
as the mountain ranges of Tennessee and North Carolina. With the es-
tablishment of their first permanent colony on the coast of Florida the
period of Spanish voyage and discovery may be said to end.
Before closing this chapter, a brief account of the only important
voyage made by the Portuguese to America will be given : At the time
of the first discovery by Columbus, the unambitious John II. was king
of Portugal. He paid but little attention to the New World, prefer-
ring the security and dullness of his own capital to the splendid allure-
ments of the Atlantic. In 1495 he was succeeded on the throne by his
cousin Manuel, a man of very different character. This monarch could
hardly forgive his predecessor for having allowed Spain to snatch from the
flag of Portugal the glory of Columbus's achievements. In order to secure
some of the benefits which yet remained. King Manuel fitted out two ves-
sels, and in the summer of 1501 commissioned Caspar Cortereal to
sail on a voyage of discovery. The Portuguese vessels reached America in
the month of July, and beginning at some point on the shores of Maine,
sailed northward, exploring the coast for nearly seven hundred miles. Just
below the fiftieth parallel of latitude Cortereal met the icebergs, and could
go no farther. Little attention was paid by him to the great forests of
pine and hemlock which stood tall and silent along the shore, promising
ship-yards and cities in after times. He satisfied his rapacity by kid-
napping fifty Indians, whom, on his return to Portugal, he sold as slaves.
A new voyage was then undertaken, with the avowed purpose of capturing
another cargo of natives for the slave-mart of Europe ; but Avhen a year
went by, and no tidings arrived from the fleet, the brother of the Portuguese
captain sailed in hope of finding the missing vessels. He also was lost,
but in what manner has never been ascertained. The fate of the Corte-
reals and their slave-ships has remained one of the unsolved mysteries
of the sea.
70 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES,
CHAPTER V.
THE FRENCH IN AMERICA.
FRANCE was not slow to profit by the discoveries of Columbus. As
early as 1504 the fishermen of Normandy and Brittany began to ply
their vocation on the banks of Newfoundland. A map of the Gulf of
St. LawTence was drawn by a Frenchman in the year 1506. Two years
later some Indians were taken to France; and in 1518 the attention of
Francis I. was turned to the colonization of the New World. Five years
afterward a voyage of discovery and exploration was planned, and John
Verrazzani, a native of Florence, was commissioned to conduct the
expedition. The special object had in view was to discover a north-west
passage to Asia.
In the month of January, 1524, Verrazzani left the shores of Europe.
His fleet consisted at first of four vessels ; but three of them were damaged
in a storm, and the voyage was undertaken with a single ship, called the
Dolphin. For fifty days, through the buffetings of tempestuous weather,
the courageous mariner held on his course, and on the 7th day of March
discovered the main land in the latitude of Wilmington. He first sailed
southward a hundred and fifty miles in the hope of finding a harbor,
but found none. Returning northward, he finally anchored somewhere
along the low sandy beach which stretches between the mouth of Cape
Fear River and Pamlico Sound. Here he began a traffic with the natives.
The Indians of this neighborhood were found to be a gentle and timid
sort of creatures, unsuspicious and confiding. A half-drowned sailor who
was washed ashore by the surf was treated with great kindness, and as soon
as opportunity offered, permitted to return to the ship.
After a few days the voyage was continued toward the nt3rth. The
whole coast of New Jersey was exjilored, and the hills marked as con-
ta,ining minerals. The harbor of New York was entered, and its safe
and spacious waters were noted with admiration. At Newport, Rhode
Island, Verrazzani anchored for fifteen days, and a trade Avas again opened
with the Indians. Before leaving the place the French sailors repaid the
confidence of the natives by kidnapping a child and attempting to steal
a defenceless Indian girl.
Sailing from Newport, Verrazzani continued his £X])iorations north-
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 71
-ward. The long and broken line of the New England coast was traced
with considerable care. The Indians of the north were wary and sus-
picious. They would buy neither ornaments nor toys, but were eager to
purchase knives and weapons of iron. Passing to the east of Nova
Scotia, the bold navigator reached Newfoundland in the latter part of
May. In July he returned to France and published an account, still ex-
tant, of his great discoveries. The name of New France was now given
to the whole country whose sea-coast had been traced by the adventurous
crew of the Dolphin.
Such was the distracted condition of France at this time, that
another expedition was not planned for a period of ten years. In 1534,
however, Chabot, admiral of the kingdom, selected James Cartier, a
seaman of St. Malo, in Brittany, to make a new voyage to America.
Two ships were fitted out for the enterprise, and after no more than
twenty days of sailing under cloudless skies anchored on the 10th day of
May off the coast of Newfoundland. Before the middle of July, Cartier
had circumnavigated the island to the northward, crossed the Gulf of St.
Lawrence to the south of Anticosti, and entered the Bay of Chaleurs.
Not finding, as he had hoped, a passage out of this bay westward, he
changed his course to the north again, and ascended the coast as far as
Gaspe Bay. Here, upon a point of land, he set up a cross bearing a
shield with the lily of France, and proclaimed the French king monarch
of the country. Pressing his way still farther northward, and then west-
ward, he entered the St. Lawrence, and ascended the broad estuary until
the narrowing banks made him aware that he was in the mouth of a river.
Cartier, thinking it impracticable to pass the winter in the New World,
now turned his prows toward France, and in thirty days anchored his ships
in the harbor of St. Malo.
So great was the fame of Cartier's first voyage that another was
planned immediately. Three good ships were provided, and quite a num-
ber of young noblemen joined the expedition. Colonization rather than
•discovery was now the inspiring motive. The sails were set by zealous
and excited crews, and on the 19th of May the new voyage was begun.
This time there was stormy weather, yet the passage to Newfoundland
was made by the 10th of August, It was the day of St. Lawrence, and
the name of that martyr was accordingly given to the gulf, and after-
ward to the noble stream which enters it from the west. Sailing north-
ward around Anticosti, the expedition proceeded up the river to the island
of Orleans, where the ships were moored in a place of safety. Two In-
dians vhom Cartier had taken with him to France in the previous year
now gave information that higher up the river there was an important
72 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
town on the island of Hochelaga. Proceeding thither in his boats, the
French captain found it as the Indians had said. A beautiful village lay
there at the foot of a high hill in the middle of the island. Climbing ta
the top of the hill, Cartier, as suggested by the scene around him, named
the island and town Mont-Real. The country was declared to belong by
right of discovery to the king of France ; and then the boats dropped
down the river to the ships. During this winter twenty-five of Cartier's
men were swept oif by the scurvy, a malady hitherto unknown in Europe.
With the opening of spring, preparations were made to return to
France. The terrible winter had proved too much for French enthusiasm.
The emblem of Catholicism, bearing the arms of France, was again planted
in the soil of the New World, and the homeward voyage began ; but be-
fore the ships had left their anchorage, the kindly king of the Hurons,
who had treated Cartier with so much generosity, was decoyed on board
and carried off to die. On the 6th day of July the fleet reached St.
Malo in safety ; but by the accounts which Cartier published on his return
the French were greatly discouraged. Neither silver nor gold had been
found on the banks of the St. Lawrence ; and what was a new world good
for that had not silver and gold ?
Francis of La Roque, lord of Roberval, in Picardy, was the next
to undertake the colonization of the countries discovered by the French.
This nobleman, four years after Cartier's return from his second voyage,
was commissioned by the court of France to plant a colony on the St.
La\vrence. The titles of viceroy and lieutenant-general of New France
were conferred upon him, and much other vainglorious ceremony attended
his preparations for departure. The man, however, who was chiefly
relied on to give character and direction to the proposed colony was no
other than James Cartier. He only seemed competent to conduct the
enterprise with any promise of success. His name was accordingly added
to the list, and he was honored with the office of chief pilot and captain-
general of the expedition.
The next thing to be done was to find material for the colony. This
was a difficult task. The French peasants and mechanics were not eager
to embark for a country which promised nothing better than savages and
snow. Cartier's honest narrative about the resources of New France had
left no room for further dreaming. So the work of enlisting volunteers
went on slowly, until the government adopted the plan of opening the
prisons of the kingdom and giving freedom to whoever would join the
expedition. There was a rush of robbers, swindlers and murderers, and
the lists were immediately filled. Only counterfeiters and traitO-3were
denied the privilege of gaining their liberty in the New World.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 73'
In the latter part of May, 1541, five ships, under the immediate
command of Cartier, left France, and soon reached the St. Lawrence.
The expedition proceeded up the river to the present site of Quebec,
where a fort was erected and named Charlesbourg. Here the colonists
passed the winter. Cartier, offended because of the subordinate position
which he held, was sullen and gloomy, and made no effort to prosecute
discoveries which could benefit no one but the ambitious Roberval. The
tv;o leaders never acted in concert ; and when La Roque, in June of the
following year, arrived with immigrants and supplies, Cartier secretly
sailed away with his part of the squadron, and returned to Europe.
Roberval was left in New France with three shiploads of criminals who
could only be restrained by whipping and hanging. During the autumn
some feeble efforts were made to discover a northern passage ; the winter
was long and severe, and spring was welcomed by the colonists chiefly
for the opportunity which it gave them of returning to France. The
enterprise undertaken with so much pomp had resulted in nothing. In
the year 1549 Roberval, with a large company of emigrants, sailed on a
second voyage, but the fleet was never heard of afterward.
A period of fifty years now elapsed before the French authorities
again attempted to colonize America. Meanwhile, private enterprise
and religious persecution had co-operated in an effort to accomplish in
Florida and Carolina what the government had failed to accomplish on
the St. Lawrence. About the middle of the sixteenth century Coligni,
the Protestant admiral of France, formed the design of establishing in
America a refuge for the persecuted Huguenots of his own country. In
1562 this liberal and influential minister obtained from the sovereign,
Charles IX., the coveted privilege of planting a colony of Protestants
in the New World. John Ribault of Dieppe, a brave and experienced
sailor, was selected to lead the Huguenots to the land of promise. Sail-
ing in February, the company reached the coast of Florida at a point
where three years later St. Augustine was founded. The River St. John's,
called by the Spaniards the St. Matthew, was entered by the French and
named the River of May. The vessels then continued northward along
the coast until they came to the entrance of Port Royal ; here it was
determined to make the settlement. The colonists were landed on an
island, and a stone engraved with the arms of their native land was set
up to mark the place. A fort was erected, and in honor of Charles IX.
named Carolina — a name which a century afterward was retained by the
English and applied to the whole country fi*ora the Savannah River to
the southern boundary of Virginia. In this fort Ribault left twenty-six
men to keep possession, and then sailed back to France for additional
74 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
emigrants and stores. But civil war was now raging in the kingdom,
and it was quite impossible to procure either supplies or colonists. No
reinforcements were sent to Carolina, and in the following spring the men
in the fort, discouraged with long waiting, grew mutinous, and killed
their leader for attempting to control them. Then they constructed a
rude brig and put to sea. After they had been driven about by the
winds for a long time, they were picked up half starved by an English
ship and carried to the coast of France.
Coligni did not yet despair of success in what he had undertaken.
Two years after the first attempt another colony was planned, and Lau-
DONNIERE chosen leader. The character, however, of this second Prot-
estant company was very bad. Many of them were abandoned men, of
little industry and no prudence. The harbor of Port Royal was now
shunned by the Huguenots, and a point on the River St. John's about
fifteen miles west of where St. Augustine now stands was selected for the
settlement. A fort was built here, and things were going well until a part
of the colonists, under the pretext of escaping from famine, contrived to get
away with two of the ships. Instead of returning to France, as they had
promised, they began to practice piracy in the adjacent seas, until they were
caught, brought back and justly hanged. . The rest of the settlers, im-
provident and dissatisfied, were on the eve of breaking up the colony,
when Ribault arrived with supplies of every sort, and restored order and
content. It was at this time that the Spaniard Melendez, as already
narrated, discovered the whereabouts of the Huguenots, and murdered the
entire company.
It remained for Dominic de Gourges, a soldier of Gascony, to
visit the Spaniards of St. Augustine with signal vengeance. This man
fitted out three ships, mostly with his own means, and with only fifty
daring seamen on board arrived in mid-winter on the coast of Florida.
With this handful of soldiers he surprised successively three Spanish
forts on the St. John's, and made prisoners of the inmates. Then, when
he was unable to hold his position any longer, he hanged his leading
captives to the branches of the trees, and put up this inscription to explain
what he had done : " Not Spaniards, but murderers."
In the year 1598 the attention of the government of France waa
once more directed to the claims which French discovery had established
in America. The Marquis of La Roche, a nobleman of influence and
distinction, now obtained a commission authorizing him to found an empire
in the New AVorld. The prisons of France were again opened to furnish
the emigrants, and the colony was soon made up. Crossing the Atlantic
hy the usual route, the vessels reached the coast of Nova Scotia, and
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 75
anchored at Sable Island. A more dismal place could not have been
ibund between Labrador and Mexico ; yet here, on this desolate island, La
Roche left forty men to form a settlement, while he himself, under the pre-
text of procuring more men and supplies, returned to France. Shortly
after his arrival in that country he died ; and for seven dreary years the
new French empire, composed of forty criminals, languished on Sable
Island. Then they were mercifully picked uj) by some passing ships and
carried back to France. Their punishment had been enough, and they
were never remanded to prison.
But the time had now come when a colony of Frenchmen should
actually be established in America. In the year 1603 the sovereignty of
the country from the latitude of Philadelphia to one degree north of
Montreal was granted to De Monts. The items of chief importance in
the patent which he received from the king Avere a monopoly of the fur-
trade of the new country and religious freedom for Huguenot immigrants.
De Monts, with two shiploads of colonists, left France early in March of
1 604, and after a pleasant voyage reached the Bay of Fundy. The sum-
mer was spent in making explorations and in trafficking with the natives.
De Monts seems to have been uncertain as to where he should plant his
colony; but while in this frame of mind, Poutrincourt, the captain of one of
the ships, being greatly pleased with a harbor which he had discovered on
the north-west coast of Nova Scotia, asked and obtained a grant of the same,
together with some beautiful lands adjacent, and he and a part of the crew
went on shore. De Monts, with the rest of the colony, crossed to the west
side of the bay, and began to build a fort on an island at the mouth of
the St. Croix River. But in the following spring they abandoned this
place, and returned to the harbor Avhich had been granted to Poutrin-
court. Here, on the 14th day of November, 1605, the foundations of the
first permanent French settlement in America were laid. The name of
Port Royal was given to the harbor and the fort, and the Avhole country,
including Nova Scotia, the surrounding islands and the main land as far
south as the St. Croix River, was called Acadia.
Two years before the settlement was made at Port Royal, Samuel
Champlain, one of the most eminent and soldierly men of his times, was
commissioned by a company of Rouen merchants to explore the country of
the St. Lawrence and establish a trading-post. The traders saw that a traffic
in the furs Avliich those regions so abundantly supplied was a surer road
to riches than rambling about in search of gold and diamonds. Under
this commission, Champlain crossed the ocean, entered the gulf, sailed up
the river, and with remarkable prudence and good judgment selected
the spot on which Quebec now stands as the site for a fort. In the
76 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
autunm of 1603, he returned to France, and published an interesting and
fiiithful account of his expedition.
In the year 1608, Champlain again visited America, and on the
3d of July in that year the foundations of Quebec were laid. In the
following year he and two other Frenchmen joined a company of Huron
and Algonquin Indians who were at war with the Iroquois of New York.
While marching with this party of w-arriors, he ascended the Sorel River
until he came to the long, narrow lake which he was the first white man
to look upon, and which has ever since borne the name of its discoverer.
Champlain was a religious enthusiast, and on that account the
development of his colony was for some time hindered. In 1612 the
Protestant party came into power in France, and the great Conde, the
protector of the Protestants, became viceroy of the French empire in
America. Now, for the third time, Champlain came to New France,
and the success of the colony at Quebec was fully assured. Franciscan
monks came over and began to preach among the Indians. These
friars and the Protestants quarreled a good deal, and the settlement
was much disturbed. A second time Champlain went with a war-
party against the Iroquois. His company was defeated, he himself
wounded and obliged to remain all winter among the Hurons; but
in the summer of 1617 he returned to the colony, in 1620 began to
build, and four years afterward completed, the strong fortress of St.
Louis. When the heavy bastions of this castle appeared on the high
cliff above the town and river, the permanence of the French settle-
ments in the valley of the St. Lawrence was no longer doubtful. To
Samuel Champlain, more than to any other man — more than to the
French government itself — the success of the North American colo-
nies of France must be attributed-
CHAPTER VI.
ENGLISH DISCOVERIES AND SETTLEMENTS.
IVTO day in the early history of the New World was more important
■^ than the 5th of May, 1496. On that day Henry VII., king of
England, signed the commission of John Cabot of Venice to make dis-
coveries and explorations in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, to carry the
English flag, and to take possession of all islands and continents which he
might discover. Cabot was a brave, adventurous man who had been a
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 77
sailor from his boyhood, and was now a wealtliy merchant of Bristol.
The autumn and winter were spent in preparations for the voyage;
five substantial ships were fitted, crews were enlisted, and everything
made ready for the opening of the spring. lu April the fleet left Bris-
tol; and on the morning of the 24th of June, at a point about the
middle of the eastern coast of Labrador, the gloomy shore was seen.
This was the real discovery of the American continent. Fourteen
months elapsed before Columbus reached the coast of Guiana, and more
than two years before Ojeda and Vespucci came in sight of the main
land of South America.
Cabot explored the shore-line of the country which he had dis-
covered for several hundred miles. He supposed that the land was a
part of the dominions of the Cham of Tartary ; but finding no inhabitants,
he went on shore, according to the terms of his commission, planted the
flag of England, and took possession in the name of the English king.
No man forgets his native land ; by the side of the flag of his adopted
country Cabot set up the banner of the republic of Venice — auspicious
emblem of another flag which should one day float from sea to sea.
As soon as he had satisfied himself of the extent and character of
the country which he had discovered, Cabot sailed for England. On the
homeward voyage he twice saw on the right hand the coast of Newfound-
land, but did not stop for further discovery. After an absence of but
little more than three months, he reached Bristol, and was greeted with
great enthusiasm. The town had holiday, the people were wild about
the discoveries of their favorite admiral, and the whole kingdom took up
the note of rejoicing. The Crown gave him money and encouragement,
new crews ' were enlisted, new ships fitted out, and a new commission
more liberal in its provisions than the first was signed in February of 1498.
Strange as it may seem, after the date of this second patent the very
name of John Cabot disappears from tlie annals of the times. Where
the remainder of his life was passed and the circumstances of his death
are involved in complete mystery.
But Sebastian, second son of John Cabot, inherited his father's
-s^^ plans and reputation, and to his father's genius added a greater genius
of his own. He had already been to the New World on that first famous
voyage, and now, when the opportunity ofiered to conduct a voyage of
his own, he threw himself into the enterprise with all the fervor of youth.
It is probable that the veiy fleet which had been equipped for his father
was entrusted to Sebastian. At any rate, the latter found himself, in the
spring of 1498, in command of a squadron of well-manned vessels and
on his way to the new continent. The particular object had in view was
78 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
that common folly of the times, the discovery of a north-west passage to
the Indies.
The voyage continued prosperously until, in the ocean west of Green-
land, the icebergs compelled Sebastian to change his course. It was July,
and the sun scarcely set at midnight. Seals were seen and the ships
ploughed through such shoals of codfish as had never before been heard of.
The shore was reached not far from the scene of the elder Cabot's discov-
eries, and then the fleet turned southward, but whether across the Gulf
of St. Lawrence or to the east of Newfoundland is uncertain. New
Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Maine Avere next explored. The whole
coast-line of New England and of the Middle States was now for the
first time since the days of the Norsemen traced by Europeans. Nor did
Cabot desist from this work, which was bestowing the title of discovery
on the crown of England, until he had passed beyond the Chesapeake.
After all the disputes about the matter, it is most probable that Cape
Hatteras is the point from which Sebastian began his homeward voyage.
The future career of Cabot was as strange as the voyages of his
boyhood had been wonderful. The scheming, illiberal Henry VII.,
although quick to appreciate the value of Sebastian's discoveries, was
slow to reward the discoverer. The Tudors were all dark-minded and
selfish princes. When King Henry died, Ferdinand the Catholic enticed
Cabot away from England and made him pilot-major of Spain. While
holding this high office he had almost entire control of the maritime
affairs of the kingdom, and sent out many successful voyages. He lived
to be very old, but the circumstances of his death have not been ascer-
tained, and his place of burial is unknown.
The year 1498 Is the most marked in the whole history off discovery.
In the month of May, Vasco de Gama of Portugal doubled the Cape
of Good Hope and succeeded in reaching Hindostan. During the sum-
mer the yoimger Cabot traced the eastern coast of North America through
more than twenty degrees of latitude, thus establishing for ever the claim
of England to the most valuable portion of the New AVorld. In August,
Columbus himself, noAV sailing on his third voyage, reached the mouth of
the Orinoco. Of the three great discoveries, that of Cabot has proved to
be by far the most important.
But several causes impeded the career of English discoveiy during
the greater part of the sixteenth century. The next year after the New
World was found, the pope, Alexander the Sixth, drew an imaginaiy line
north and south three hundred miles west of the Azores, and issued a
papal bull giving all islands and countries west of that line to Spain.
Henry YII. of England was himself a Catholic, and he did not care to
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 79
begin a conflict with his Church by pressing his own claims to the newiy-
found regions of the west. His son and successor, Henry VIII., at first
adopted the same poKcy, and it was not until after the Reformation had
been accomplished in England that the decision of the pope came to be
disregarded, and finally despised and laughed at.
During the short reign of Edward VI. the spirit of maritime adven-
ture was again aroused. In 1548 the king's council voted a hundred
pounds sterHng to induce the now aged Sebastian Cabot to return from
Spain and become grand-pilot of England. The old admiral quitted
Seville and once more sailed under the English flag. In the reign of
Queen Mary the power of England on the sea was not materially extended,
but with the accession of Elizabeth a wonderful impulse was given to all
enterprises which promised the aggrandizement of her kingdom.
The spirit of discovery now reappeared in that bold and skillful
sailor, Martin Feobisher. Himself poor, Dudley, earl of Warwick,
came to his aid, and fitted out three small vessels to sail in search of a
north-west passage to Asia. Three-quarters of a century had not sufficed
to destroy the fanatical notion of reaching the Indies by sailing around
America to the north. One of Frobisher's ships was lost on the voyage,
another, terrified at the prospect, returned to England, but in the third the
dauntless captain proceeded to the north and west until he attained a
higher latitude than had ever before been reached on the American coast.
Above the sixtieth parallel he discovered the group of islands which
lies in the mouth of Hudson's Strait. Still farther to the north he came
upon a large island which he supposed to be the mainland of Asia ; to
this he gave the name of Meta Incognita. North of this island, in lati-
tude sixty-three degrees and eight minutes, he entered the strait which
has ever since borne the name of its discoverer, then sailed for England,
carrying home with him one of the Esquimaux and a stone which was
declared by the English refiners to contain gold.
London was greatly excited. Queen Elizabeth herself added a
vessel to the new fleet which in the month of May, 1577, departed for
Meta Incognita to gather the precious metal by the shipload. Coming
among the icebergs, the ships were for weeks together in constant danger
of being crushed to atoms between the floating mountains. The summel
was unfavorable. No ships reached as high a point as Frobisher had
attained by himself on the previous voyage. The mariners were in con-
sternation at the gloomy perils around them, and availed themselves of
the first opportunity to get out of these dangerous seas and return to
England.
Were the English gold-hunters satisfied ? Not at all. Fifteen new
80 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
vessels were immediately fitted out, the queen again bearing part of the
expense, and as soon as the spring of 1578 opened the third voyage was
begun. This time a colony was to be planted in the gold-regions of the
north. Three of the ships, loaded with emigrants, were to remain in the
promised land. The other twelve were to be freighted with gold-ore and
return to London. When they reached the entrance to Hudson's Strait,
they encountered icebergs more terrible than ever. Through a thousand
perils the vessels finally reached Meta Incognita and took on cargoes of
dirt. The provision-ship now slipped away from the fleet and returned
to England. Affairs grew desperate. The north-west passage was for-
gotten. The colony which was to be planted was no longer thought of.
Faith in the shining earth which they had stored in the holds gave way,
and so, with disappointed crews on board and several tons of the spurious
ore under the hatches, the ships set sail for home. The El Dorado of the
Esquimaux had proved an utter failure.
The English admiral, Sir Francis Drake, sought fortune in a
different manner. Without much regard for the law of nations, he began,
in the year 1572, to prey upon the merchant-ships of Spain, and gained
thereby enormous wealth. Five years later he sailed around to the Pacific
coast by the route which Magellan had discovered, and became a terror to
the Spanish vessels in those watere. When he had thus sufficiently en-
riched himself by a process not very different from piracy, he formed the
daring project of tracing up the western coast of North America until he
should enter the north-west passage from the Pacific, and thence sail east-
ward around the continent. With this object in view, he sailed northward
a-long the coast as far as Oregon, when his sailors, who had been for seve-
ral years within the tropics, began to shiver with the cold, and the enter-
prise, which could have resulted in nothing but disaster, was given up.
Returning to the south, Drake passed the winter of 1579-80 in a harbor
on the coast of Mexico. To all that portion of the western shores of
America which he had thus explored he gave the name of New Albion ;
but the earlier discovery of the same coast by the Spaniards rendered the
English claim of but little value. No colony of Englishmen had yet
been established in the New World.
Sir Humphrey Gilbert was perhaps the first to conceive a rational
plan of colonization in America. His idea was to form somewhere on the
shores of the New Continent an agricultural and commercial state. With
this purpose he sought aid from the queen, and received a liberal patent
authorizing him to take possession of any six hundred square miles of
unoccupied territory in America, and to j^lant thereon a colony of which
he himself should be })roprietor and governor. With this commission.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 81
Gilbert, assisted by his illustrious step-brother, Walter Raleigh, pre-
pared a fleet of five vessels, and in June of 1583 sailed for the west.
Only two days after their departure the best vessel in the fleet treacher-
ously abandoned the rest and returned to Plymouth. Early in August,
Gilbert reached Newfoundland, and going ashore, took formal possession
of the country in the name of his queen. Unfortunately, some of the
sailors discovered in the side of a hill scales of mica, and a judge of
metals, whom Gilbert had been foolish enough to bring mth him, de-
clared that the glittering mineral was silver ore. The crews became in-
subordinate. Some went to digging the supposed silver and carrying it
on board the vessels, while others gratified their piratical propensities by
attacking the Spanish and Portuguese ships that were fishing in the
neighboring harbors.
Meanwhile, one of Gilbert's vessels became worthless, and had to be
abandoned. AVith the other three he left Newfoundland, and steered
toward the south. When ofl" the coast of Massachasetts, the largest of
the remaining ships was wrecked, and a hundred men, with all the spuri-
ous silver ore, went to the bottom. The disaster was so great that Gilbert
determined to return at once to England. The weather was stormy, and
the two ships that were now left were utterly unfit for the sea ; but the
voyage was begun in hope. The brave captain remained in the weaker
vessel, a little frigate called the Squirrel, already shattered and ready to
sink. At midnight, as the ships, within hailing distance of each other,
were struggling through a raging sea, the Squirrel was suddenly en-
gulfed ; not a man of the courageous crew was saved. The other ship
finally reached Falmouth in safety.
But the project of colonization was immediately renewed by Raleigh.
In the following spring that remarkable man obtained from the queen a
new patent fully as liberal as the one granted to Gilbert. Raleigh was to
become lord-proprietor of an extensive tract of country in America ex-
tending from the thirty-third to the fortieth parallel of north latitude.
This territory was to be peopled and organized into a state. The frozen
regions of the north were now to be avoided, and the sunny country of
the Huguenots was to be chosen as the seat of the rising empire. Two
ships were fitted out, and the command given to Philip Amidas and
Arthur Barlow.
In the month of July the vessels reached the coast of Carolina.
The sea that laved the long, low beach was smooth and glassy. The
woods were full of beauty and song. The natives were generous and
hospitable. Explorations were made along the shores of Albemarle and
Pamlico Sounds, and a landing finally efiected on Roanoke Island, where
6
82 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the English were entertained by the Indian queen. But neither Amidas
nor Barlow had the courage or genius necessary to such an enterprise.
After a stay of less than two months they returned to England to exhaust
the rhetoric of description in praising the beauties of the new land. In
allusion to her own life and reign, Elizabeth gave to her delightful
country in the New World the name of Virginia.
In December of 1584, Sir Walter brought forward a bill in Par-
liament by which his previous patent was confirmed and enlarged. The
mind of the whole nation was inflamed at the prospects which Raleigh's
province now offered to emigrants and adventurers. The plan of coloni-
zation, so far from being abandoned, was undertaken with renewed zeal and
earnestness. The proprietor fitted out a second expedition, and appointed
the soldierly Ralph Lane governor of the colony. Sir Richard Gren-
ville commanded the fleet, and a, company, not unmixed with the gallant
young nobility of the kingdom, made up the crew. Sailing from Ply-
mouth, the fleet of seven vessels reached the American coast on the 20th
of June. At Cape Fear they were in imminent danger of being wrecked ;
but having escaped the peril, they six days afterward reached Roanoke in
safety. Here Lane was left with a hundred and ten of the emigrants to
form a settlement. Grenville, after making a few unsatisfactory explora-
tions, returned to England, taking with him a Spanish treasure-ship which
he had captured. Privateering and colonization went hand in hand.
Meanwhile, some Indians of a village adjacent to Roanoke had
committed a petty theft, and the English wantonly burned the whole
town as a measure of revenge. Jealousy and suspicion took the place of
former friendships. Lane and some of his companions were enticed with
false stories to go on a gold-hunting expedition into the interior ; their
destruction was planned, and only avoided by a hasty retreat to Roanoke.
Wingina, the Indian king, and several of his chiefs were now in turn
allured into the power of the English and inhumanly murdered. Hatred
and gloom followed this atrocity, then despondency and a sense of danger,
until the discouragement became so great that when Sir Francis Drake,
returning with a fleet from his exploits on the Pacific coast, came in sight,
the colonists prevailed on him to carry them back to England.
It was a needless and hasty abandonment, for within a few days a
shipload of stores arrived from the prudent Raleigh ; but finding no colony,
the vessel could do nothing but return. Two weeks later Sir Richard
Grenville himself came back to Roanoke with three well-laden ships, and
made a fruitless search for the colonists. Not to lose possession of the
country altogether, he left fifteen men upon the island, and set sail for
home.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 83
The ardor of the English people was now somewhat cooled. Yet
they had before them truthful descriptions of the beauty and mag-
nificence of the new country, and another colony, consisting largely of
families, was easily made up. A charter of municipal government was
granted by the proprietor, John White was chosen governor, and every
precaution taken to secure the permanent success of the City of Raleigh,,
soon to be founded in the west. In July the emigrants arrived in Caro-
lina. Avoiding the dangerous capes of Hatteras and Fear, they came
safely to Roanoke ; but a search for the fifteen men who had been left
there a year before only revealed the fact that the natives, now grown
savage, had murdered them. Nevertheless, the northern extremity of
the ill-omened island was chosen as the site for the city, and on the 23d
of the month the foundations were laid.
But disaster attended the enterprise. Jealousy between the settlers
and the Indians grew into hostility, and hostility into M^ar. Then a peace
was concluded, and Sir Walter gave countenance to an absurd perform-
ance by which Manteo, one of the Indian chiefs, was made a peer of
England, with the title of Lord of Roanoke. It was a silly and stupid
piece of business. Notwithstanding the presence of this copper-colored
nobleman, the colonists were apprehensive and gloomy. They pretended
to fear starvation, and in the latter part of August almost compelled
Governor White to return to England for an additional cargo of supplies.
It was a great mistake. If White had remained, and the settlers had
given themselves to tilling the soil and building houses, no further help
would have been needed. The 18th of August was marked as the birth-
day of Virginia Dare, the first-born of English children in the New
World. When White set sail for England, he left behind him a colony
of a hundred and eight persons. What their fate was has never been
ascertained. The story of their going ashore and joining the Indians is
unlikely in itself, and has no historical evidence to support it.
The Invincible Armada was now bearing down upon the coasts of
England. All the resources and energies of the kingdom were demanded
for defence; and although Raleigh managed to send out two supply-
ships to succor his starving colony, his efforts to reach them were unavail-
ing. The vessels which he sent with stores went cruising after Spanish
merchantmen, and were themselves run down and captured by a man-of-
war. Not until the spring of 1590 did the governor finally return to
search for the unfortunate colonists. The island was a desert, tenantless
and silent. No soul remained to tell the story of the lost.
In the mean time, Sir Walter, after spending two hundred thou-
sand dollars of his own means in the attempt to found and foster a colony,
84 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
had given up the enterprise. He assigned his exclusive proprietary rights
to an association of London merchants, and it was under their auspices
that Wliite had made the final search for the settlers of Roanoke. From
the date of this event very little in the way of voyage and discovery was
accomplished by the English until the year 1602, when maritime enter-
prise again brought the flag of England to the shores of America. BaHt
THOLOMEW GosNOLD was the man to whom belongs the honor of mak-
ing the next explorations of our coast.
The old route from the shores of Europe to America was very cir-
cuitous. Ships from the ports of England, France and Spain sailed first
southward to the Canary Islands, thence to the West Indies, and thence
northward to the coast-line of the continent. Abandoning this path as
unnecessarily long and out of the way, Gosnold, in a single small vessel
called the Concord, sailed directly across the Atlantic, and in seven weeks
reached the coast of Maine. The distance thus gained was fully two
thousand miles. It was Gosnold's object to found a colony, and for
that purpose a company of emigrants came with him. Beginning at
Cape Elizabeth, explorations w^re made to the southward ; Cape Cod
was reached, and here the captain, with four of his men, went on shore.
It was the first landing of Englishmen within the limits of New Eng-
land. Cape Malabar was doubled, and then the vessel, leaving Nantucket
on the right, turned into Buzzard's Bay. Selecting the most westerly
island of the Elizabeth group, the colonists went on shore, and there be-
gan the first New England settlement.
It was a short-lived enterprise. A traffic was opened with the
natives which resulted in loading the Concord with sassafras root, so much
esteemed for its fragrance and healing virtues. Everything went well for
a season ; but when the ship was about to depart for England, the settlers
became alarmed at the prospect before them, and pleaded for permission to
return with their friends. Gosnold acceded to their demands, and the
island was abandoned. After a pleasant voyage of five weeks, and in
less than four months from the time of starting, the Concord reached
home in safety.
Gosnold and his companions gave glowing accounts of the country
which they had visited, and it was not long until another English expe-
dition to America was planned. Two vessels, the Speedwell and the
Discoverer, composed the fleet, with Martin Peixg for commander. A
cargo of merchandise suited to tlie tastes of the Indians was put into
the holds; and in April of 1603, a few days after the death of Queen
Elizabeth, the vessels sailed for America. They came safely to Penobscot
Bay, and afterward spent some time in exploring the harbors and shores
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 85
of Maine. Then, turning to the south and coasting Massachusetts, Pring
reached the sassafras region, and loaded his vessels at Martha's Vineyard.
Thence he returned to England, reaching Bristol in October, after an
absence of six months.
Two years later, George Waymouth, under the patronage of the
earl of Southampton, made a voyage to America, and passing Cape Cod
on the left, came to anchorage among the islands of St. George, on the
coast of Maine. He explored the harbor, and sailed up the river for a
considerable distance, taking note of the fine forests of fir and of the
beautiful scenery along the banks. A profitable trade was opened with
the Indians, some of whom learned to speak English and returned with
Waymouth to England. The voyage homeward was safely made, the
vessels reaching Plymouth about the middle of June. This was the last
of the voyages made by the English preparatory to the actual establish-
ment of a colony in America. The time had at last arrived when, in the
beautiful country of the Chesapeake, a permanent settlement should be
effected.
CHAPTER VII.
ENGLISH DISCOVERIES AND SETTLEMENTS.— CONTINUED.
THE 10th of April, 1606, was full of fate in the destinies of the west-
ern continent. On that day King James I. issued two great patents
directed to men of his kingdom, authorizing them to j)0ssess and colo-
nize all that portion of North America lying between the thirty-fourth
and forty-fifth parallels of latitude. The immense tract thus embraced
extended from the mouth of Cape Fear River to Passamaquoddy Bay,
and westward to the Pacific Ocean. The first patent was granted to an
association of nobles, gentlemen and merchants residing at London, and
called the London Company, while the second instrument was issued
to a similar body which had been organized at Plymouth, in South-west-
ern England, and which bore the name of the Plymouth Company.
To the former corporation was assigned all the region between the thirty-
fourth and the thirty-eighth degrees of latitude, and to the latter the tract
extending from the forty-first to the forty-fifth degree. The narrow belt
of three degrees lying between the thirty-eighth and forty-first parallels
was to be equally open to the colonies of either company, but no settle-
86 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ment of one party was to be made within less than one hundred miles
of the nearest settlement of the other. The nature and extent of these
grants will be fully understood from an examination of the accompany-
ing map. Only the London Company was successful under its charter
in planting an American colony.
The man who was chiefly instrumental in organizing the London
Company was Bartholomew Gosnold. His leading associates were Edward
"Wingfield, a rich merchant, Robert Hunt, a clergyman, and John Smith,
a man of genius. Others who aided the enterprise were Sir John Pop-
ham, chief-justice of England, Richard Hakluyt, a historian, and Sir
Ferdinand Gorges, a distinguished nobleman. By the terms of the char-
ter, the affairs of the company were to be administered by a Superior
Council, residing in England, and an Inferior Council, residing in the
colony. The members of the former body were to be chosen by the king,
and to hold office at his pleasure ; the members of the lower council M^ere
also selected by the royal direction, and were subject to removal by the
same power. All legislative authority was likewise vested in the mon-
arch. In the first organization of the companies not a single principle
of self-government was admitted. The most foolish clause in the patent
was that which required the proposed colony or colonies to hold all prop-
erty in common for a period of five years. The wisest provision in the
instrument was that which allowed the emigrants to retain in the New
World all the rights and privileges of Englishmen.
In the month of August, 1606, the Plymouth Company sent their
first ship to America. The voyage, which was one of exploration,
was but half completed, when the company's vessel was captured by a
Spanish man-of-war. In the autumn another ship was sent out, which
vemained on the American coast until the following spring, and then
i'eturned with glowing accounts of the country. Encouraged by these
reports, the company, in the summer of 1607, despatched a colony of a
hundred persons. Arriving at the mouth of the River Kennebec, the
colonists began a settlement under favorable circumstances. Some forti-
fications were thrown up, a storehouse and several cabins built, and the
place named St. George. Then the ships returned to England, leaving
a promising colony of forty-five members; but the winter of 1607-8
was very severe ; some of the settlers were starved and some frozen, the
storehouse burned, and when summer came the remnant escaped to
England.
The London Company had better fortune. A fleet of three vessels
was fitted out, and the command given to Christopher Ne^vpo^t. On the
9th of December the ships, having on board a hundred and five colonists,
j^A^rJ^«^),
GULF <k>j^0m&^
MAP in.
ENGLISH GRANTS.
1606—1732.
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 87
among whom were Wingfield and Smith, left England. Newport, to
begin with, committed the astonishing folly of taking the old route by
way of the Canaries and the West Indies, and did not reach the American
coast until the month of April. It was the design that a landing should
be made in the neighborhood of Koanoke Island, but a storm prevailed
and carried the ships northward into the Chesapeake. Entering the
magnificent bay and coasting along the southern shore, the vessels came
to the mouth of a broad and beautiful river, which was named in honor
of King James. Proceeding up this stream about fifty miles, Ne^vport
noticed on the northern bank a peninsula more attractive than the rest
for its verdure and beauty ; the ships were moored, and the emigrants
went on shore. Here, on the 13th day of May (Old Style), in the year
1607, were laid the foundations of Jamestown, the oldest English settle-
ment in America. It was within a month of a hundred and ten years
after the discovery of the continent by the elder Cabot, and nearly forty-
iwo years after the founding of St. Augustine. So long a time had been
required to plant the first feeble germ of English civilization in the New
World.
After the unsuccessful attempt to form a settlement at the mouth
of the Kennebec, very little was done by the Plymouth Company for
several years ; yet the purpose of planting colonies was not relinquished.
Meanwhile, a new impetus was given to the affairs of North Virginia by
the ceaseless activity and exhaustless energies of John Smith. Wounded
by an accident, and discouraged, as far as it was possible for such a man
to be discouraged, by the distractions and turbulence of the Jamestown
colony. Smith left that settlement in 1609, and returned to England. On
recovering his health he formed a partnership with four wealthy mer-
chants of London, with a view to the fur-trade and probable establish-
ment of colonies within the limits of the Plymouth grant. Two ships
were accordingly freighted with goods and put under Smith's command.
The summer of 1614 was spent on the coast of lower Maine, where a
profitable traffic was carried on with the Indians. The crews of the ves-
sels were well satisfied through the long days of July with the plea-
sures and profits of the teeming fisheries, but Smith himself found nobler
work. Beginning as far north as practicable, he patiently explored the
country, and drew a map of the whole coast-line from the Penobscot
River to Cape Cod. In this map, which is still extant, and a marvel of
accuracy considering the circumstances under which it was made, the
country was called New England — a name which Prince Charles con-
iirmed, and which has ever since remained as the designation of the North-
eastern States of the republic. In the month of November the ships re-
88 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
turned to Plymouth, taking with them many substantial proofs of a suc-
cessful voyage.
Smith now pleaded more strongly than ever in behalf of coloniza-
tion. Some of his friends in the Plymouth Company gave him aid, and
in 1615 a small colony of sixteen persons was sent out in a single ship.
When nearing the American coast, they encountered a terrible storm, and
after being driven about for two or three weeks were obliged to return to
England. In spite of these reverses, the undaunted leader renewed the
enterprise, and again raised a company of emigrants. Part of his crew
became mutinous, betrayed him, and left him in mid-ocean. His own
ship was run down and captured by a band of French pirates, and him-
self imprisoned in the harbor of E,ochelle. Later in the same year he
escaped in an open boat and made his way back to London. With as-
tonishing industry, he now published a description of jSTew England,,
and was more zealous than ever in inciting the company of Plymouth to
energetic action. In these efforts he was much impeded. The London
Company was jealous of its rival, and put obstacles in the way of every
enterprise. The whole of the years 1617-18 was spent in making and
unmaking plans of colonization, until iinally, on the petition of some of
its own leading members, the Plymouth Company was formally super-
seded by a new corporation called the Council of Plymouth, consisting
of forty of the most wealthy and influential men of the kingdom. On
this body were conferred, by the terms of the new charter, almost un-
limited powers and privileges. All that part of America lying between
the fortieth and the forty-eighth parallels of north latitude, and extending
from ocean to ocean, was given to the council in fee simple. More than a
million of square miles were embraced in the grant, and absolute jurisdic-
tion over this immense tract was committed to forty men. How King
James was ever induced to sign such a charter has remained an unsolved
mystery.
A plan of colonizing was now projected on a grand scale. John
Smith was appointed admiral of New England for life. The king, not-
withstanding the opposition of the House of Commons, issued a procla-
mation enforcing the provisions of the charter, and everything gave
promise of the early settlement of America. Such were the schemes of
men to possess and people the Western Continent. Meanwhile, a Power
higher than the will of man was working in the same direction. The
time had come when, without the knowledge or consent of James L,
without the knowledge or consent of the Council of Plymouth, a per-
manent settlement should be made on the bleak shores of New England.
The Puritans ! Name of all names in the early history of the
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. S9-
West ! About the close of the sixteenth century a number of poor dis-
senters scattered through the North of England, especially in the counties
of Nottingham, Lincoln and York, began to join themselves together for
the purposes of free religious worship. Politically, they were patriotic
subjects of the English king; religiously, they were rebels against the
authority of the English Church. Their rebellion, however, only ex-
tended to the declaration that every man has a right to discover and ap-
ply the truth as revealed in the Scriptures without the interposition of
any power other than his own reason and conscience. Such a doctrine was-
very repugnant to the Church of England. Queen Elizabeth herself
declared such teaching to be subversive of the principles on which her
monarchy was founded. King James was not more tolerant ; and from
time to time violent persecutions broke out against the feeble and dis-
persed Christians of the north.
Despairing of rest in their own country, the Puritans finally deter-
mined to go into exile, and to seek in another land the freedom of wor-
ship which their own had denied them. They turned their faces toward
Holland, made one unsuccessful attempt to get away, were brought back
and thrown into prisons. Again they gathered together on a bleak heath
in Lincolnshire, and in the spring of 1608 embarked from the mouth of
the Humber. Their ship brought them in safety to Amsterdam, where,
under the care of their heroic pastor, John Robinson, they passed one
winter, and then removed to Leyden. Such was the beginning of their
wandering. They took the name of Pilgrims, and grew content to have
no home or resting-place. Privation and exile could be endured when
sweetened with liberty.
But the love of native land is a universal passion. The Puritans
in Holland did not forget — could not forget — that they were Englishmen.
During their ten years of residence at Leyden they did not cease to long
for a return to the country which had cast them out. Though ruled by
a heartless monarch and a bigoted priesthood, England was their country-
still. The unfamiliar language of the Dutch grated harshly on their ears.
They pined with unrest, conscious of their ability and willingness to do
something which should convince even King James of their patriotism
and worth.
It was in this condition of mind that about the year 1617 the
Puritans began to meditate a removal to the wilds of the New "World.
There, with honest purpose and prudent zeal, they would extend the
dominions of the English king. They would forget the past, and be at
peace with their country. Accordingly, John Carver and Robert Cush-
man were despatched to England to ask permission for the church of
^0 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Leyden to settle in America. The agents of the London Company
and the Comicil of Plymouth gave some encouragement to the request,
but the king and his ministers, especially Lord Bacon, set their faces
against any project which might seem to favor heretics. The most that
King James would do was to make an informal promise to let the Pil-
grims alone in America. Such has always been the despicable attitude
of bigotry toward every liberal enterprise.
The Puritans were not discouraged. With or without permission,
protected or not protected by the terms of a charter which might at best
be violated, they would seek asylum and rest in "the Western wilderness.
Out of their own resources, and with the help of a few faithful friends,
they provided the scanty means of departure and set their faces toward
the sea. The Speedwell, a small vessel of sixty tons, was purchased at
Amsterdam, and the Mayflower, a larger and more substantial ship, was
hired for the voyage. The former was to carry the emigrants from Ley-
den to Southampton, where they were to be joined by the Mayflower, with
another company from London. Assembling at the harbor of Delft, on
the River Meuse, fifteen miles south of Leyden, as many of the Pilgrims
as could be accommodated went on board the Speedwell. The whole con-
gregation accom2)anied them to the shore. There Robinson gave them a
consoling farewell address, and the blessings and prayers of those who
were left behind followed the vessel out of sight.
Both ships came safely to Southampton, and within tw^o weelvs the
emigrants were ready for the voyage. On the 5th of August, 1620, the
vessels left the harbor ; but after a few days' sailing the Speedwell was
found to be shattered, old and leaky. On this account both ships an-
chored in the port of Dartmouth, and eight days were spent in making
the needed repairs. Again the sails were set ; but scarcely had the land
receded from sight before the captain of the Speedwell declared his vessel
unfit to breast the ocean, and then, to the great grief and discouragement
of the emigrants, put back to Plymouth. Here the bad ship was aban-
doned ; but the Pilgrims were encouraged and feasted by the citizens, and
the more zealous went on board the Mayflower, ready and anxious for a
final efibrt. On the 6th day of September the first colony of New Eng-
land, numbering one hundred and two souls, saw the shores of Old
England grow dim and sink behind the sea.
The voyage was long and perilous. For sixty-three days the ship
was buffeted by storms and driven. It had been the intention of the
Pilgrims to found their colony in the beautiful country of the Hudson ;
but the tempest carried them out of their course, and the first land seen
was the desolate Cape Cod. On the 9th of November the vessel was
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY 91
anchored in the bay ; then a meeting was held on board and the colony-
organized under a solemn compact. In the charter whicli they there
made for themselves the emigrants declared their loyalty to the English
Crown, and covenanted together to live in peace and harmony, with equal
rights to all, obedient to just laws made for the common good. Such was
the simple but sublime constitution of the oldest New England State. A
nobler document is not to be found among the records of the world.* To
this instrument all the heads of families, forty-one in number, solemnly
set their names. An election was held in which all had an equal voice,
and John Carver was unanimously chosen governor of the colony.
After two days the boat was lowered, but was found to be half
rotten and useless. More than a fortnight of precious time was required
to make the needed repairs. Standish, Bradford and a few other hardy
spirits got to shore and explored the country ; nothing was found but a
heap of Indian corn under the snow. By the 6th of December the boat
was ready for service, and the governor, with fifteen companions, went
ashore. The weather was dreadful. Alternate rains and snow-storms
converted the clothes of the Pilgrims into coats-of-mail. All day they
wandered about, and then returned to the sea-shore. In the morning
they were attacked by the Indians, but escaped to the ship with their
lives, cheerful and giving thanks. Then the vessel was steered to the
south and west for forty-five miles around the coast of what is now the
county of Barnstable. At nightfall of Saturday a storm came on ; the
rudder was wrenched away, and the poor ship driven, half by accident
and half by the skill of the pilot, into a safe haven on the west side
of the bay. The next day, being the Sabbath, was spent in religious
devotions, and on Monday, the 11th of December, Old Style, 1620, the
Pilgrim Fathers landed on the Rock of Plymouth.
It was now the dead of winter. There was an incessant storm of
sleet and snow, and the houseless immigrants, already enfeebled by their
sufferings, fell a-dying of hunger, cold and exposure. After a few days
spent in explorations about the coast, a site was selected near the first
landing, some trees were felled, the snow-drifts cleared away, and on the
9th of January the heroic toilers began to build New Plymouth. Every
man took on himself the work of making his own house ; but the rav-
ages of disease grew daily worse, strong arms fell powerless, lung-fevers
and consumptions wasted every family. At one time only seven men
were able to work on the sheds which were building for shelter from the
storms ; and if an early spring had not brought relief, the colony must
have perished to a man. Such were the privations and grieis of that
"terrible winter when New England began to be.
* See Appendix, note h.
92 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER VIII.
VOYAGES AND SETTLEMENTS OF THE DUTCH.
THE first Dutch settlement in America was made on Manhattan or
New York Island. The colony resulted from the voyages and
explorations of the illustrious Sir Henry Hudson. In the year 1607
this great British seaman was employed by a company of London mer-
chants to sail into the North Atlantic and discover a route eastward or
westward to the Indies. He made the voyage in a single ship, passed up
the eastern coast of Greenland to a higher point of latitude than ever
before attained, turned eastward to Spitzbergen, circumnavigated that
island, and then was compelled by the icebergs to return to England. In
the next year he renewed his eiforts, hoping to find between Spitzbergen
and Nova Zembla an open way to the East. By this course he confi-
dently expected to shorten the route to China by at least eight thousand
miles. Again the voyage resulted in failure ; his employers gave up the
enterprise in despair, but his own sj^irits only rose to a higher determi-
nation. When the cautious merchants would furnish no more means, he
quitted England and went to Amsterdam. Holland was at this time the
foremost maritime nation of the world, and the eminent navigator did not
long go begging for patronage in the busy marts of that country. The
Dutch East India Company at once furnished him with a ship, a small
yacht called the Half Moon, and in April of 1609 he set out on his
third voyage to reach the Indies. About the seventy-second parallel of
latitude, above the capes of Norway, he turned eastward, but between
Lapland and Nova Zembla the ocean was filled with icebergs, and further
sailing was impossible. Baffled but not discouraged, he immediately
turned his prow toward the shores of America ; somewhere between the
Chesapeake and the North Pole he would find a passage into the Pacific
ocean.
In the month of July Hudson reached Newfoundland, and pa-ssing
to the coast of Maine, spent some time in repairing his ship, which had
been shattered in a storm. Sailing thence southward, he touched at Cape
Cod, and by the middle of August found himself as far south as the
Chesapeake. Again he turned to the north, determined to examine the
coast more closely, and on the 28th of the month anchored in Delaware-
VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY. 93
Bay. After one day's explorations the voyage was continued along the
coast of New Jersey, until, on the 3d of September, the Half Moon came
to a safe anchorage in the bay of Sandy Hook. Two days later a land-
ing was effected, the natives flocking in great numbers to the scene, and
bringing gifts of corn, wild fruits and oysters. The time until the 9th
of the month was spent in sounding the great harbor ; on the next day
the vessel passed the Narrows, and then entered the noble river which
bears the name of Hudson.
To explore the beautiful stream was now the pleasing task. For
eight days the Half Moon sailed northward up the river. Such mag-
nificent forests, such beautiful liills, such mountains rising in the distance,
such fertile valleys, planted here and there with ripening corn, the Neth-
erlanders had never seen before. On the 19th of September the ve&sel
was moored at what is now the landing of Kinder! look; but an exploring
party, still unsatisfied, took to the boats and rowed up the river beyond
the site of Albany. After some days they returned to the ship, the moor-
in gs were loosed, the vessel dropped down the stream, and on the 4th of
October the sails were spread for Holland. On the homeward voyage
Hudson, not perhaps without a touch of national pride, put into the har-
bor of Dartmouth. Thereupon the government of King James, with
characteristic illiberality, detained the Half Moon, and claimed the crevr
as Englishmen. All that Hudson could do was to forward to his employ-
ers of the East India Company an account of his successful voyage and
of the delightful country which he had visited under the flag of Holland.
Now were the English merchants ready to spend more money to
find the north-west passage. In the summer of 1610, a ship, called the
Discovery, was given to Hudson ; and with a vision of the Indies flitting
before his imagination he left England, never to return. He had learned
by this time that nowhere between Florida and Maine was there an open-
ing through the continent to the Pacific. The famous pass must now be
sought between the Gulf of St. La^vrence and the southern point of
Greenland. Steering between Cape Farewell and Labrador, in the track
which Frobisher had taken, the vessel came, on the 2d day of August,
into the mouth of the strait which bears the name of its discoverer. No
ship had ever before entered these waters. For a while the way west-
ward was barred with islands ; but passing between them, the bay seemed
to open, the ocean widened to the right and left, and the route to China
was at last revealed. So believed the great captain and his crew ; but
sailing farther to the west, the inhospitable shores narrowed on the more
inliospitable sea, and Hudson found himself environed with the terrors
of winter in the frozen gulf of the North. With unfaltering courage he
94 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
bore up until his provisions were almost exhausted ; spring was at hand,
and the day of escape had already arrived, when the treacherous crew
broke out in mutiny. They seized Hudson and his only son, with seven
other faithful sailors, threw them into an open shallop, and cast them off
among the icebergs. The &te of the illustrious mariner has never been
ascertained.
In the summer of 1610 the Half Moon was liberated at Dartmouth,
and returned to Amsterdam. In the same year several ships owned by
Dutch merchants sailed to the banks of the Hudson River and engaged
in the fur-trade. The traffic was very lucrative, and in the two following
years other vessels made frequent and jtrofitable voyages. Early in 1614
an act was passed by the States-General of Holland giving to certaiu
merchants of Amsterdam the exclusive right to trade and establish settle-
ments within the limits of the country explored by Hudson. Under this
commission a fleet of five small trading-vessels arrived in the summer of
the same year at Manhattan Island. Here some rude huts had already
been built by former traders, but now a fort for the defence of the place
was erected, and the settlement named New Amsterdam. In the course
of the autumn Adrian Block, who commanded one of the ships, sailed
through East River into Long Island Sound, made explorations along the
coast as far as the mouth of the Connecticut, thence to Narraganset Bay,
and even to Cape Cod. Almost at the same time Christianson, another
Dutch commander, in the same fleet, sailed up the river from Manhattan
to Castle Island, a short distance below the site of Albany, and erected a
block-house, which was named Fort Nassau, for a long time the northern
outpost of the settlers on the Hudson. Meanwhile, Cornelius May, the
captain of a small vessel called the Fortune, sailed from New Amsterdam
and explored the Jersey coast as far south as the Bay of Delaware. Upon
these two voyages, one north and the other south from Manhattan Island
where the actual settlement was made, Holland set up a feeble claim to
the country which was now named New Netherlands, extending from
Cape Henlopen to Cape Cod — a claim which Great Britain and France
treated with derision and contempt. Such were the feeble and inaus-
picious beginnings of the Dutch colonies in New York and Jersey.
PART III.
oolo:nial history.
A. I>. 1607—1775.
PARENT COLONIES.
CHAPTER IX.
VIRGINIA.— THE FIRST CHABTEB.
MANY circumstances impeded the progress of the oldest Virginia
colony. The first settlers at Jamestown were idle, improvident,
dissolute. Of the one hundred and five men who came with Newport
in the spring of 1607, only twelve were common laborers. There were
four carpenters in the company, and six or eight masons and blacksmiths,
but the lack of mechanics was compensated by a long list of forty-eiglit
gentlemen. If necessity had not soon driven these to the honorable
vocations of toil, the colony must have f)erished. The few married men
who joined the expedition had left their families in England. The pros-
pect of planting an American State on the banks of James Eiver was
not at all encouraging.
From the first the affairs of the colony were badly managed. King
James made out instructions for the organization of the new State, and
then, with his usual stupidity, sealed up the parchment in a box which
was not to be opened until the arrival of the emigrants in America. The
names of the governor and members of the council were thus unknowTi
during the voyage; there was no legitimate authority on shipboard;
insubordination and anarchy prevailed among the riotous company. In
this state of turbulence and misrule, an absurd suspicion was blown out
against Captain John Smith, the best and truest man in the colony. He
was accused of making a plot to murder the council, of which he was
supposed to be a member, and to make himself monarch of Virginia.
An arrest followed, and confinement until the end of the voyage. When
at last the colonists reached the site of their future settlement, the king's
instructions were unsealed and the names of the seven members of the-
S6
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Inferior Council made kno"UTi. Then a meeting of that body was held
and Edward Wingfield duly elected first governor of Virginia. Smith,
who had been set at liberty, was now charged with sedition and excluded
from his seat in the council. He demanded to be tried ; and when it was
found that his jealous enemies could bring nothing but their own suspi-
cions agamst him, he was acquitted, and finally, through the good offices
of Kobert Hunt, restored to his place as a member of the corporation.
As soon as the settlement was well begun and the affairs of the colony
came into a better
condition, the rest-
less Smith, accom-
panied by New-
port and twenty
others, ascended
and explored
James River for
f o r t y-fi V e miles.
This was the first
of those marv^elous
expeditions which
were undertaken
and carried out by
Smith's enterprise
and daring. Just
below the falls of
the river, at the
present site of
Richmond, the
English explorers
came upon the
capital of Pow-
hatan, the Indian king. Smith was not greatly impressed with the mag-
nificence of an empire whose chief city was a squalid village of twelve
wigwams. The native monarch received the foreigners with formal
courtesy and used his authority' to moderate the dislike which his sub-
jects manifested at the intrusion. About the last of May the company
returned to Jamestown, and fifteen days later Newport embarked for
England.
The colonists now for the fii'st time began to realize their situation.
They were alone amid the solitudes of the New World. The beauties
of the Virginia wilderness were around them, but the terrors of the
CAPTArN JOHN SMITH.
VIRGINIA.— FIRST CHARTER. 97
approacliing winter were already present to their imagination. In the
latter part of August dreadful diseases broke out in the settlement, and
the colony was brought to the verge of ruin. The fort which had been
built for the defence of the plantation was filled with the sick and dying.
At one time no more than five men were able to go on duty as sentinels.
Bartholomew Gosnold, the projector of the colony and one of the besi
men in the council, died, and before the middle of September one-half
of the whole number had been swept off by the terrible malady. If the
frosts of autumn had not come to check the ravages of disease, no soul
would have been left to tell the story.
Civil dissension was added to the other calamities of the settlement.
President Wingfield, an unprincipled man, and his confederate, George
Kendall, a member of the council, were detected in embezzling the stores
of the colony. Attempting to escape in the company's vessel, they were
arrested, impeached and removed from office. Only three councilmen
now remained, Ratcliffe, Martin and Smith ; the first was chosen presi-
dent. He was a man who possessed neither ability nor courage, and the
affairs of the settlers grew worse and worse. After a few weelvs of vacil-
lation and incompetency, he, like his predecessor, was caught in an attempt
to abandon the colony, and willingly gave up an office which he could not
fill. Only Martin and Smith now remained ; the former elected the lat-
ter president of Virginia ! It was a forlorn piece of business, but very
necessary for the public good. In their distress and bitterness there had
come to pass among the colonists a remarkable unanimit}' as to Smith's
merits and abilities. The new administration entered upon the discharge
of its duties without a particle of opposition.
The new president, though not yet thirty years of age, was a veteran
in every kind of valuable human experience. Born an Englishman;
trained as a soldier in the wars of Holland ; a traveler in France, Italy
and Egypt; again a soldier in Hungary; captured by the Turks and
sold as a slave; sent from Constantinople to a prison in the Crimea;
killing a taskmaster who beat him, and then escaping through the woods
of Russia to Western Europe ; going with an army of adventurei-s against
Morocco; finally returning to England and joining the London Com-
pany,— he was now called upon by the very enemies who had persecuted
and ill-treated him to rescue them and their colony from destruction. A
strange and wonderful career ! John Smith was altogether the most noted
man in the early history of America.
Under the new administration the Jamestown settlement soon began
to show signs of vitality and progress. Smith's fii'st care, after the set-
tlers were in a measure restored to health, was to improve the buildinga
7
98 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the plantation. The fortifications of the place were strengthened,
dwellings were repaired, a storehouse erected, and everything made ready
for the coming winter. The next measure was to secure a supply of pro-
visions from the surrounding country. A plentiful harvest among the
Indians had compensated in some degree for the mismanagement and
rascality of the former officers of the colony, but to procure corn from the
natives was not an easy task. Although ignorant of the Indian language,
Smith undertook the hazardous enterprise. Descending James River as
far as Hampton Roads, he landed with his five companions, went boldly
among the natives, and began to offer them hatchets and copper coins in
exchange for corn. The Indians only laughed at the proposal, and then
mocked the half-starved foreigners by offering to barter a piece of bread
for Smith's sword and musket. Finding that good treatment was only
thrown away, the English captain formed the desperate resolution of fight-
ing. He and his men fired a volley among the affrighted savages, who
ran yelling into the woods. Going straight to their wigwams, he found
an abundant store of corn, but forbade his men to take a grain until the
Indians should return to attack them. Sixty or seventy painted warriors,
headed by a priest who carried an idol in his arms, soon came out of the
forest and made a violent onset. The English not only stood their ground,
but made a rush, wounded several of the natives and captured their idol.
A parley now ensued ; the terrified priest came and humbly begged for his
fallen deity, but Smith stood grimly with his musket across the pros-
trate idol, and would grant no terms until six unarmed Indians had loaded
his boat with corn. Then the image was given up, beads and hatchets
were liberally distributed among the warriore who ratified the peace by
performing a dance of friendship, while Smith and his men rowed up the
river with a boat-load of supplies.
There were other causes of rejoicing at Jamestown. The neighbor-
ing Indians, made liberal by their own abundance, began to come into
the fort with voluntary contributions. The fear of famine passed away.
The woods were full of wild turkeys and other game, inviting to the chase
as many as delighted in such excitement. Good discipline was maintained
in the settlement and friendly relations established Avith several of the
native tribes. Seeing the end of their distresses, the colonists revived in
spirit; cheerfulness and hope took the place of melancholy and despair.
As soon as the setting in of winter had made an abandonment of
the colony impossible, the president, to whose ardor winter and summer
were alike, gave liimself freely to the work of exploring the country.
With a company of six Englishmen and two Indian guides he began the
ascent of the Chickahominy River. It was generally believed by the
VIRGINIA.— FIRST CHARTER. 99
people of Jamestown that by going up this stream they could reach the
Pacific Ocean. Smith knew well enough the absurdity of such an opin-
ion, but humored it because of the opportunity which it gave him to
explore new territoiy. The rest might dig imaginary gold-dust and hunt
for the Pacific; he would see the country and map the course of the
river.
The company proceeded up the Chickahominy until their barge ran
aground in shallow water. Mooring the boat in a place of safety, Smith left
four of the Englishmen to guard it, and with the other two and the Indian
guides ascended the stream in a canoe. When this smaller craft could go
no farther, it was put in charge of the white men, while the captain, with
only the savages, proceeded on foot. For twenty miles he continued along
the banks of the river, now dwindled to a mere creek winding about the
woods and meadows. Meanwhile, the men who were left to protect the
barge disobeyed their orders, and wandering into the forest, were attacked
by three hundred Indians under the command of their king, Opechan-
canough, the brother of Powhatan. Three of the Englishmen escaped
to the boat, but the fourth, George Cassen by name, was taken prisoner.
Him the savages compelled by torture to reveal the whereabouts of Smith.
The two men who guarded the canoe were next overtaken and killed.
The captain himself was at last discovered, attacked, wounded with an
arrow and chased through the woods. The missiles of the barbarians
flew around him in a shower, but he compelled the Indian guides to stand
between him and his enemies, and every discharge of liis musket brought
down a savage. He fought like a lion at bay, tied one of the guides to
his left arm for a buckler, ran and fired by turns, stumbled into a morass,
and was finally overtaken. The savages were still wary of their danger-
ous antagonist until he laid down his gun, made signs of surrender and
was pulled out of the mire.
Without exhibiting the least signs of fear. Smith demanded to see
the Indian chief, and on being taken into the presence of that dignitary
began to excite his interest and curiosity by showing him a pocket com-
pass and a watch. These mysterious instruments struck the Indians
with awe ; and profiting by his momentary advantage, the prisoner began
to draw figures on the ground, and to give his captors some rude lessons
in geography and astronomy. The savages were amazed and listencxi for
an hour, but then grew tired, bound their captive to a tree and prepared
to shoot him. At the critical moment he flourished his compass in the
air as though performing a ceremony, and the Indians forbore to shoot.
His sagacity and courage had gained the day, but the more appalling
danger of torture was yet to be avoided. The savages, however, were
100 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
thoroughly superstitious, and became afraid to proceed against him except
iu the most formal manner. He was regarded by them as an inhabitant
of another world whom it was dangerous to touch.
Smith was first taken to the town of Orapax, a few miles north-
east of the site of Richmond. Here he found the Indians making
great preparations to attack and destroy Jamestown. They invited him
to join them and become their leader, but he refused, and then terrified
them by describing the cannon and other destructive weapons of the
English. He also managed to write a letter to his countrymen at the
settlement, telling them of his captivity and their own peril, asking for
certain articles, and requesting especially that those bearing the note should
be thoroughly frightened before their return. This letter, which seemed
to them to have such mysterious power of carrying intelligence to a dis-
tance, was not lost on the Indians, who dreaded the writer more than ever.
When the warriors bearing the epistle arrived at Jamestown and found
everything precisely as Smith had said, their terror and amazement knew
no bounds, and as soon as they returned to Orapax all thought of attack-
ing the settlement was at once given up.
The Indians now marched their captive about from village to vil-
lage, the interest and excitement constantly increasing, until, near the
ibrk of York River, they came to Pamunkey, the capital of Opechan-
canough. Here Smith was turned over to the priests, who assembled in
their Long House, or judgment-hall, and for three days together danced
around him, sang and yelled after the manner of their superstition. The
object was to determine by this wild ceremony what their prisoner's fate
should be. The decision was against him, and he was condemned to death.
It was necessary that the sanction of the Indian emperor should
be given to the sentence, and Smith was now taken twenty-five miles
down the river to a town where Powhatan lived in winter. The savage
monarch was now sixty years of age, and, to use Smith's ovm language,
looked every inch a king. He received the prisoner with all the rude
formalities peculiar to his race. Going to the Long House of the village,
the emperor, clad in a robe of raccoon skins, took his seat on a kind of
throne prepared for the occasion. His two daughters sat right and left,
while files of AAarriors and women of rank were ranged around the hall.
The king solemnly reviewed the cause and confirmed the sentence of
death. Two large stones were brought into the liall. Smith was dragged
forth bound, and his head put into position to be crushed with a war-
club. A stalwart painted savage was ordered out of the rank and stood
ready for the bloody tragedy. The signal was given, the grim execu-
tioner raised his bludgeon, and another moment liad decided the fate of
VIRGINIA.— FIRST CHARTER. 101
both the illustrious captive and his colony. But the peril went by harm-
less. Matoaka,* the eldest daughter of Powhatan, sprang from her seat
and rushed between the warrior's uplifted club and the prostrate prisoner.
She clasped his head in her arms and held on with the resolution of despair
imtil her father, yielding to her frantic appeals, ordered Smith to be
unbound and lifted up. Again he was rescued from a terrible death.
There is no reason in the world for doubting the truth of this affecting
and romantic story, one of the most marvelous and touching in the his-
tory of any nation.
Powhatan, having determined to spare his captive's life, received
him into favor. The prisoner should remain in the household of the mon-
arch, making hatchets for the warriors and toys for the king's daughters.
By degrees his liberties were enlarged, and it was even agreed soon
afterward that he should return to his own people at Jamestown. The
conditions of his liberation were that he should send back to Orapax two
cannons and a grindstone. Certain warriors were to accompany Smith to
the settlement and carry the articles to Powhatan. There should then
be peace aad friendship between the English and the Red men. The
journey was accordingly begun, the company camping at night in the
woods, and Smith being in constant peril of his life from the uncertain
disposition of the savages. But the colony was reached in safety, the lost
captain and his twelve Indian guides being received with great gladness.
Smith's first and chief care was to make a proper impression on
the minds of the savages. He had improved the opportunities of his
captivity by learning the language of Powhatan's people, and by making
himself familiar with their peculiarities and weaknesses — an experience of
vast importance to himself and the colony. He now ordered the two
cannons which he had promised to give Powhatan to be brought out and
loaded to the muzzle with stones. Then, under pretence of teaching the
Indians gunnery, he had the pieces discharged among the tree-tops, which
were bristling with icicles. There was a terrible crash, and the savages,
cowering with fear and amazement, could not be induced to touch the
dreadful engines. The barbarous delegation returned to their king with
neither guns nor grindstones.
As a matter of fact, the settlers were very little to be dreaded by
anybody. Only thirty-eight of them were left alive, and these were frost-
bitten and half starved. Their only competent leader had been absent
for seven weeks in the middle of one of the severest winters known in
* Powhatan's tribe had a superstition that no one who!>e real name was unknown could
be injurec". They therefore told the English falsely that Matoaka's name was Poca-
hontas.
102 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
mcdern times. The old fears and dLscontents of the colonists had revived ;
and when Smith returned to the settlement, he found all hands preparing
to escape in the pinnace as soon as the ice should break in the river.
With much persuasion and a few wholesome threats he induced the
majority to abandon this project, but the factious spirits of the colony,
burning with resentment against him and his influence, made a conspir-
acy to kill him, and he knew not what hour might be his last.
In the mid.st of these dark days Captain Newport arrived from
England. He brought a full store of supplies and one hundred and
twenty emigrants. Great was the joy throughout the little plantation ;
only the president was at heart as much grieved as gladdened, for he saw
in the character of the new comers no promise of anything but vexation
and disaster. Here were thirty-four gentlemen at the head of the list
to begin with ; then came gold-hunters, jewelers, engravers, adventurers,
strollers and vagabonds, many of whom had more business in jail than
at Jamestown. To add to Smith's chagrin, this company of worthless
creatures had been sent out contrary to his previous protest and injunc-
tion. He had urged Newport to bring over only a few industrious
mechanics and laborers; but the love of gold among the members of the
London Company had prevailed over common sense to send to Virginia
another crowd of profligates.
The kind of industry which Smith had encouraged in the colony
was now lauglied at. As soon as the weather would permit, the new-
comers and as many of the old settlers as had learned nothing from the
past year's experience began to stroll about the country digging for gold.
In a bank of sand at the mouth of a small tributary of the James some
glittering particles were found, and the whole settlement was ablaze with
excitement. Martin and Newport, both members of the council, were
carried away with the common fanaticism. The former already in imagi-
nation saw himself loaded with wealth and honored with a peerage. The
latter, having filled one of his ships with the supposed gold-dust, sent it
to England, and then sailed up James River to find the Pacific Ocean !
Fourteen weeks of the precious springtime, that ought to have been given
to ploughing and planting, were consumed in this stupid nonsense. Even
the Indians ridiculed the madness of men who for imaginary grains of
gold were wasting their chances for a crop of corn.
In this general folly Smith was quite forgotten ; but foreseeing that
the evil must soon work its own cure, he kept his patience, and in the
mean time busied himself with one of his most brilliant and successful
enterprises ; this was no less than the exploration of Chesapeake Bay and
its tributaries. Accompanied by Dr. Russell and thirteen other comrades
VIRGINIA.— FIRST CHARTER.
103
who had remained faithful to him, he left Jamestown on the 2d day of
June. He had nothing but an open barge of three tons' burden, but in
this he steered boldly out by way of Hampton Roads and Cape Henry
as far as Smith's Island. Returning thence around the peninsula which
ends with Cape Charles, the survey of the eastern shore of the bay was
begun, and continued northward as far as the river Wicomico, in Mar^•
land. From this point the
expedition crossed over to the
mouth of the Patuxent, and
thence coasted northward along
the western side to the Pataps-
co. Here some members of
the company became discon-
tented, and insisted on return-
ing to the colony. Smith gave
fl, reluctant consent, but in steer-
ing southward had tlie good
fortune to enter the mouth of
the Potomac. The crew were
so much pleased with the pros-
pect that they agreed to explore
the great river before returning
homeward. Accordingly, the
barge was steered up stream as
far as the falls above George-
town. The country was much
admired ; and when the explor-
ers were tired of adventure,
they dropped down the river
to the bay, and turning south-
ward, reached Jamestown on
the 21st of July.
After a rest of three days a second voyage was begun. This time
the expedition reached the head of the bay, and sailed up the Susquehanna
River until the volume of water would float the barge no farther. Here
an acquaintance was made with a race of Indians of gigantic stature and
fiercer disposition than was known among the natives of Virginia. On
the return voyage Smith passed down the bay, exploring every sound and
inlet of any note, as far as the mouth of the Rappahannoc ; this stream
he ascended to the head of navigation, and then, returning by way of the
York and Chesapeake Rivers, reached Jamestown on the 7th of Septem-
Jamestown and Vicinity.
Smith's First Voyage in the Chesapeake --
Smith's Second Voyage in the Chesapeake
104 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ber. He had been absent a little more than three months, had explored
the winding coast of the great bay for fully three thousand miles, had
encountered hostile savages by hundreds and thousands, had been driven
hither and thither by storms, once wrecked, once stung by a poisonous
fish and brought so near to death that his comrades digged his grave ;
now he was come back to the colony with a Map of the Chesapeake^
which he sent by Newport to England, and which is still preserved. Only
one man had been lost on the expedition. Richard Fetherstone had died,
and was buried on the Rappahannoc.
Within three days after Smith's return to Jamestown he was form-
ally elected president. He entered at once upon the duties of his office,
correcting abusas, enforcing the laws and restoring order to the distracted
colony. There was a marked change for the better ; gold-hunting be-
came unpopular, and the rest of the year was noted as a season of great
prosperity. Late in the autumn Ne\vport arrived with seventy additional
immigrants, increasing the number to more than two hundred. The
health was so good that only seven deatlis occurred between September
and May of the following year. Excellent discipline was maintained.
Every well man was obliged to work six hours a day. New houses were
l>uilt, new fields fenced in; and all through the winter the sound of axe
and saw and hammer gave token of a prosperous and growing village.
Such was the condition of affairs in the spring of 1609.
CHAPTER X.
VIRGINIA.— THE SECOND CHARTER.
ON the 23d of May, 1609, King James, without consulting the wishes
of his American colonists, revoked their constitution, and granted to
the London Company a new charter, by the terms of which the govern-
ment of Virginia was completely changed. The territory included under
the new patent extended from Cape Fear to Sandy Hook, and westward
to the Pacific Ocean. The members of the Superior Council were now
to be chosen by the stockholders of the company, vacancies were to be
filled by the councilors, who were also empowered to elect a governor
from their own number.
The council was at once organized in accordance •with this charter^
VIRGINIA.— SECOND CHARTER. 105
and the excellent Lord De La Ware chosen governor for life. With him
were joined in authority Sir Thomas Gates, lieutenant-general ; Sir George
Somers, admiral ; Christopher Newport, vice-admiral ; Sir Thomas Dale,
high marshal ; Sir Ferdinand Wainman, master of horse ; and other dig-
nitaries of similar sort. Attracted by the influence of these noblemen, a
large company of more than five hundred emigrants was speedily col-
lected, and early in June a fleet of nine vessels sailed for America. Lord
Delaware did not himself accompany the expedition, but delegated his
authority to three commissioners, Somers, Gates and Newport. About
the middle of July the ships, then passing the West Indies, were over-
taken and scattered by a storm. One small vessel was wrecked, and
another, having on board the commissioners of Lord Delaware, was driven
ashore on one of the Bermuda Islands, where the crew remained until
April of the following year ; the other seven ships came safely to James-
town.
But who should now be governor ? Captain Smith was at first dis-
posed to give up his office, but in a few days the aifairs of the colony
were plainly going to ruin, and he was urged by the old settlers and the
better class of new-comers to continue in authority. Accordingly, declar-
ing that his powers as president under the old constitution did iiot cease
until some one should arrive from England properly commissioned to
supersede him, he kept resolutely to the discharge of his duties, although
in daily peril of his life. He arrested Ratcliffe* and Archer, put some
of the most rebellious brawlers in prison, and then, in order to distract
the attention of the rest, planned two new settlements, one, of a hun-
dred and twenty men, under the command of Martin, to be established
at Nansemond ; the other, of the same number, under Captain West, to
form a colony at the falls of the James. Both companies behaved badly.
In a few days after their departure troubles arose between West's men
and the Indians. The president was sent for in order to settle the diffi-
culty ; but finding his efforts unavailing, he returned to Jamestown. On
his way down the river, while asleep in the boat, a bag of gunpowder
lying near by exploded, burning and tearing his flesh so terribly that in
his agony he leaped overboard. Being rescued from the river, he was
carried to the fort, where he lay for some time racked with fever and tor-
tured with his wounds. Finally, despairing of relief under the imperfect
medical treatment which the colony affi^rded, he decided to return to
England. He accordingly delegated his authority to Sir George Percy,
a brother of the earl of Northumberland, and about the middle of Sep-
* This man's real name was not RatclifFe, but Sicklemore. He had been president of
the colony in 1607, and was an accomplished thief as well as an impostor.
106 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
tember, 1609, left the scene of his heroic toils and sufferings, never to
return.
There remained at Jamestown a colony of four hundi'ed and ninety
persons, well armed, well sheltered and well supplied. But such was the
viciousuess and profligacy of the greater number, and such the insubor-
dination and want of proper leadership, after Smith's departure, that by
the beginning of winter the settlement was face to face with starvation.
The Indians became hostile and hovered around the plantations, strag-
glers were intercepted and murdered, houses were fired at every opportu-
nity, disease returned to add to the desolation, and cold and hunger
completed the terrors of a winter which was long remembered with a
shudder and called The Staeving Time. By the last of March there
were only sixty persons alive, and these, if help had not come speedily,
could hardly have lived a fortnight.
Meanwhile, Sir Thomas Gates and his companions, who had been
shipwrecked in the Bermudas, had constructed out of the materials of
their old ship, with such additional timber as they could cut from the for-
est, two small vessels, and set sail for Virginia. They came in full expec-
tation of a joyful greeting from a happy colony. What, therefore, was
their disappointment and grief when a few wan, half-starved wretches
crawled out of their cabins to beg for bread ! Whatever stores the com-
missioners had brought with them were distributed to the famishing
settlers, and Gates assumed control of the government.
But the colonists had now fully determined to abandon for ever a
place which promised them nothing but disaster and death. In vain did
the commissioners remonstrate; they were almost driven by the clamors
around them to yield to the common will. An agreement was made to
sail for Newfoundland ; there the remnant of the Virginia colony should
be distributed among the fishermen until such time as some friendly ship
might carry them back to England.
On the 8th of June Jamestown was abandoned. The disheartened
settlers, now grown resentful, were anxious before leaving to burn the
town, but Gates defeated this design, and M-as himself the last man to go
on board. Four pinnaces lay at their moorings in the river ; embark-
ing in these, the colonists dropped down with the tide, and it seemed as
though the enterprise of Raleigh and Gosnold had ended in failure and
humiliation.
But Lord Delaware was already on his way to America. Before
the escaping settlers had passed out of the mouth of the river, the ships
of the noble governor came in sight. Here were additional immigrants,
plentiful supplies and promise of better things to come. Would the
VIRGINIA.— SECOND CHARTER. 107
colonists return ? The majority gave a reluctant consent, and before night-
fall the fires were again kindled on the hearthstones of the deserted village.
The next day was given to religious services ; the governor caused his com-
mission to be read, and entered upon the discharge of his duties. The
amiability and virtue of his life, no less than the mildness and decision of
his administration, endeared him to all and inspired the colony with hope.
Autumn came, and Lord Delaware fell sick. Against his own will,
and to the great regret of the colony, he was compelled to return to Eng-
land. Having reluctantly delegated his authority to Percy — the same
who had been the deputy of Captain Smith — the good Delaware set sail
for his own country. It was an event of great discouragement ; but for-
tunately, before a knowledge of the governor's departure reached England,
the Superior Council had despatched a new shipload of stores and another
company of emigrants, under command of Sir Thomas Dale. The vessel
arrived at Jamestown on the 10th of May, and Percy was superseded by
the captain, who bore a commission from the council. Dale had been a
military officer in the wars of the K^etherlands, and he now adopted a
system of martial law as the basis of his administration. He was, how-
ever, a man so tolerant and just that veiy little complaint was made on
account of his arbitrary method of governing.
One of Dale's first acts was to write to the council in England,
requesting that body to send out immediately as large a number of colon-
ists as possible, with an abundance of supplies. For once the council acted
promptly ; and in the latter part of August, Sir Thomas Gates arrived with
a fleet of six ships, having on board three hundred immigrants and a large
quantity of stores. There was great thanksgiving in the colony, a fresh
enthusiasm was enkindled, and contentment came with a sense of security.
Thus far the property of the settlers at Jamestown had been held
in common. The colonists had worked together, and in time of harvest
deposited their products in storehouses which were under the control of
the governor and council. Now the right of holding private property
was recognized. Governor Gates had the lands divided so that each set-
tler should have three acres of his own; every family might cultivate a
garden and plant an orchard, the fruits of which no one but the owner
was allowed to gather. The benefits of this svstem of labor were at once
apparent. The laborers, as soon as each was permitted to claim the
rewards of his own toil, became cheerful and industrious. There were
now seven hundred persons in the colony ; new plantations were laid out
on every side, and new settlements were formed on both banks of the
river and at considerable distances from Jamestown. The promise of an
American State, so long deferred, seemed at last to be realized.
108 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XI.
VIRGINIA.— THE THIRD CHARTER.
EARLY in the year 1612 the London Company obtained from the
king a third patent, by the terms of which the character of the gov-
ernment was entirely changed. The Superior Council was abolished and
the powers of that body transferred to the stockholders, who were author-
ized to hold public meetings, to elect their own officers, to discuss and
decide all questions of law and right, and to govern the colony on their
own responsibility. The cause of this change was the unprofitableness
of the colony as a financial enterprise, and the consequent dissatisfaction
of the company with the management of the council. The new patent,
although not so intended by the king, was a great step toward a demo-
cratic form of government in Virginia.
2. The year 1613 was marked by two important events, both of them
resulting from the lawless behavior of Captain Samuel Argall. While
absent on an expedition up the Potomac River he learned that Pocahon-
tas, who had had some difficulty with her father's tribe, was residing in
that neighborhood. Procuring the help of a treacherous Indian family,
the English captain enticed the unsuspecting girl on board his vessel and
carried her captive to Jamestown. The authorities of the colony, instead
of jnmishing Argall for this atrocity, aggravated the outrage by demand-
ing that Powhatan should pay a heavy ransom for his daughter's libera-,
tion. The old king indignantly refused, and ordered his tribes to prepare
for war. Meanwhile, Pocahontas, who seems not to have been greatly
grieved on account of her captivity, was converted to the Christian faith
and became by baptism a member of the Episcopal Church. She was
led to this course of action chiefly by the instruction and persuasion of
John Rolfe, a worthy young man of the colony, who after the baptism
of the princess sought her in marriage. Powhatan and his chief men
gave their consent, and the nuptials were duly celebrated in the spring
of the following year. By this means war was averted, and a bond of
union established between the Indians and the whites.
3. Two years later Rolfe and his wife went to England, where they
were received in the highest circles of society. Captain Smith gave them
a letter of introduction to Queen Anne, and many other flattering atten-
VIRGINIA.— THIRD CHARTER. 109
tions were bestowed on the modest daughter of the Western wilderness.
In the following year, Rolfe made preparations to return to America ; but
before embarking, Pocahontas fell sick and died. There was left of this
marriage a son, who afterward came to Jamestown and was a man of some
importance in the affairs of the colony. To him several influential families
of Virginians still trace their origin. John Randolph of Roanoke was a
grandson of the sixth generation from Pocahontas.
When Captain Argall returned from his expedition up the Potomac,
he was sent with an armed vessel to the coast of Maine. The avowed
object of the voyage was to protect the English fishermen who frequented
the waters between the Bay of Fundy and Cape Cod, but the real pur-
pose was to destroy the colonies of France, if any should be found within
the limits of the territory claimed by England. Ai-riving at his destina-
tion, Argall soon found opportunity for the display of his violence and
rapacity. The French authorities of Acadia were at this time building
a village on Mount Desert Island, near the mouth of the Penobscot. This
settlement was the first object of ArgalFs vengeance. The place was cap-
tured, pillaged and burned ; part of the inhabitants were put on board a
vessel bound for France, and the rest were carried to the Chesapeake. The
French colony at the mouth of the St. Croix River next attracted the
attention of the English captain, who cannonaded the fort and destroyed
every building in the settlement. Passing thence across the bay to
Port Royal, Argall burned the deserted hamlet which Poutrincourt and
his companions had built there eight years before. On his way back to
Virginia he made a descent on the Dutch traders of Manhattan Island,
destroyed many of their huts, and compelled the settlers to acknowledge
the sovereignty of England. The result of these outrageous proceedings
was to confine the French settlements in America to the banks of the St.
Lawrence, and to leave a clear coast for the English flag from Kova Scotia
to Florida.
In the month of March, 1614, Sir Thomas Gates returned to Eng-
land, leaving the government in the hands of Dale, whose administration
lasted for two years. During this time the laws of the colony were
much improved, and, more imj^ortaut still, the colonial industry took
an entirely different form. Hitherto the labor of the settlers had been
directed to the planting of vineyards and to the manufacture of potosli,
soap, glass and tar. The managers of the London Company had at last
learned that these articles could be produced more cheaply in Europe
than in America. They had also discovered that there were certain
products peculiar to the New World which might be raised and exported
with great profit. Chief among such native products was the plant called
110 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
tobacco, the use of which had already become fashionable in Spain, Eng-
land and France. This, then, became the leading staple of the colony,
and was even used for money. So entirely did the settlers give them-
selves to the cultivation of the famous weed that the very streets of
Jamestown were ploughed up and planted with it.
It was a great disaster to the people of the colony when Argall wa»
chosen deputy-governor. He was a man who had one virtue, courage ;
and in all other respects was thoroughly bad. The election occurred in
1617, and through the influence of an unscrupulous faction composed of
Argall's friends he was not only selected as Lord Delaware's deputy in
America, but was also made an admiral of the English navy. His
administration was characterized by fraud, oppression and violence.
Neither property nor life was secure against his tyranny and greed. By
and by, the news of his proceedings reached England ; emigration ceased
at once, and the colony became a reproach, until Lord Delaware restored
confidence by embarking in person for Virginia. But the worthy noble-
man died on the voyage, and Argall continued his exactions and cruelty.
In the spring of 1619, he was at last displaced through the influence
of Sir Edwyn Sandys, and the excellent Sir George Yeardley appointed
to succeed him.
^lartial law was now abolished. The act which required each
settler to give a part of his labor for the common benefit was also
repealed, and thus the people were freed from a kind of colonial servi-
tude. Another action was taken of still greater importance. Governor
Yeardley, in accordance with instructions received from the company,
divided the plantations along James River into eleven districts, called
boroughs, and issued a proclamation to the citizens of each borough to
elect tAVO of their own number to take part in the government of the
colony. The elections were duly held, and on the 30th of July, 1619,
the delegates came together at Jamestown. Here was organized the
Virginia House of Burgesses, a colonial legislature, the first popular
assembly held in the New World.
The Burgesses had many privileges, but very little power. They
might discuss the affairs of the colony, but could not control them ; pass
laws, but could not enforce them ; declare their rights, but could not
secure them. Though the governor and council should both concur in
the resolutions of the assembly, no law was binding until ratified by the
company in England. Only one great benefit was gained — the freedom
of debate. Wherever that is recognized, liberty must soon follow.
The year 1619 was also marked by the introduction of negro slavery
mto Virginia. The servants of the people of Jamestown had hitherto
VIRGINIA.— THIRD CHARTER. Ill
been persons of English or German descent, and their term of service
had varied from a few months to many years. No perpetual servitude
had thus far been recognized, nor is it likely that the English colonists
would of themselves have instituted the system of slave labor. In the
month of August a Dutch man-of-war sailed up the river to the planta-
tions, and oiFered by auction twenty Africans. They were purchased by
the wealthier class of planters, and made slaves for life. It was, however,
nearly a half century from this time before the system of negro slavery
became well established in the English colonies.
Twelve years had now passed since the founding of Jamesto^vn.
Eighty thousand pounds sterling had been spent by the company in the
attempted development of the new State. As a result there were only
six hundred men in the colony, and these for the most part were rovers
who intended to return to England. Sir Thomas Smith, the treasurer,
had managed matters badly. Very few families had emigrated, and
society in Virginia was coarse and vicious. In this condition of affairs
Smith was superseded by Sir Edwyn Sandys, a man of great prudence and
integrity. A reformation of abuses was at once begun and carried out.
By his wisdom and liberality the new treasurer succeeded before the end
of the summer of 1620 m collecting and sending to America a company
of twelve hundred and sixty-one persons. Another measure of still
greater importance was equally successful. By the influence of Sandys
and his friends, ninety young women of good breeding and modest man-
ners were induced to emigrate to Jamestown. In the following spring sixty
others of similar good character came over, and received a hearty welcome.
The statement that the early Virginians bought their wives is
absurd. All that was done was this : when Sandys sent the first company
of women to America, he charged the colonists with the expense of the
voyage — a measure made necessary by the fact that the company was
almost bankrupt. An assessment was made according to the number
who were brought over, and the rate fixed at a hundred and twenty
pounds of tobacco for each passenger — a sum which the settlers cheerfully
paid. The many marriages that followed were celebrated in the usual
way, and nothing further was thought of the transaction. When the sec-
ond shipload came, the cost of transportation was reported at a hundred and
fifty pounds for each passenger, which was also paid without complaint.
In July of 1621 the London Company, which had now almost
run its course, gave to Virginia a code of written laws and fi-ame of
government modeled after the English constitution. The terms of the
instrument were fev» and easily understood. The governor of the colony
was as li'therto to be appointed by the company, a council to be chosen
112 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
by the same body, and a house of burgesses, two members from each
district, to be elected by the people. In making laws the councilors and
burgesses sat together. When a new law was proposed, it was debated,
and if passed received the governor's signature, then was transmitted to
England and ratified or rejected by the company. The constitution also
acknowledged the right of petition and of trial by jury, but the most
remarkable and liberal concession was that which gave the burgesses the
power of vetoing any objectionable acts of the company.
Governor Yeardley's administration ended in October of 1621.
At that time Sir Francis Wyatt arrived, commissioned as governor and
bearing the new constitution of Virginia. The colony was found in a
very flourishing condition. The settlements extended for a hundred and
forty miles along both banks of James River and far into the interior,
especially northwai'd toward the Potomac. There remained but one
caase of foreboding and alarm. The Indians had seen in all this growth
and prosperity the doom of their own race, and had determined to make
one desperate effort to destroy their foes before it should be too late. To
do this in open war was impossible ; necessity and the savage impulse work-
ing together suggested treachery as the only means likely to accomplish
the result. Circumstances favored the villainous undertaking. Pocahon-
tas was dead. The peaceable and faith-keeping Powhatan had likewise
passed away. The ambitious and crafty Opechancanough, who succeeded
to his brother's authority in 1618, had ever since been plotting the destruc-
tion of the English colony, and the time had come for the bloody tragedy.
The savages carefully concealed their murderous purpose. Until
the very day of the massacre they continued on terms of friendship with
the English. They came unmolested into the settlements, ate with their
victims, borrowed boats and guns, made purchases, and gave not the
slightest token of hostility. The attack was planned for the 22d of
March, at mid-day. At the fatal hour the work of butchery began.
Every hamlet in Virginia was attacked by a band of yelling barbarians.
No age, sex or condition awakened an emotion of jiity. ISIen, women
and children were indiscriminately slaughtered, until three hundred and
forty-seven had perished under the knives and hatchets of the savages.
But Indian treachery was thwarted by Indian faithfulness. What
was the chagrin and rage of the warriors to find that Jamestown and the
other leading settlements had been warned at the last moment, and were
prepared for the onset ? A converted Red man, wishing to save an Eng-
lishman who had been his friend, went to him on the night before the
massacre and revealed the plot. The alarm was spread among the settle-
ments, and thus the greater part of the colony escaped destruction. But
VIRGINIA.— THIRD CHARTER. 113
the outer plantations were entirely destroyed. The people crowded to-
gether on the larger farms about Jamestown, until of the eighty settlements
there were only eight remaining. Still, there were sixteen hundred reso-
lute men in the colony ; and although gloom and despondency prevailed
for a while, the courage of the settlers soon revived, and sorrow gave
place to a desire for vengeance.
It was now the turn of the Indians to suffer. Parties of English
soldiers scoured the country in every direction, destroying wigwams,
burning villages and killing every savage tnat fell in their way, until the
tribes of Opechancanough were driven into the wilderness. The colon-
ists, regaining their confidence and zeal, returned to their deserted farms,
and the next year brought such additions that the census showed a popu-
lation of two thousand five hundred.
Meanwhile, difficulties arose between the corporation and the king.
Most of the members of the London Company belonged to the patriot
party in England, and the freedom with which they were in the habit of
discussing political and governmental matters was very distasteful to the
monarch. A meeting of the stockholders, now a numerous body, was
held once every three months, and the debates took a wider and still
wider range. The liberal character of the Virginia constitution was
offensive to King James, who determined by some means to obtain con-
trol of the London Company, or else to suppress it altogether. A com-
mittee was accordingly appointed to look into the affairs of the cor-
poration and to make a report on its management. The commissioners
performed their duty, and reported that the company, in addition to being
a hot-bed of political agitation, was unsound in every part, that the treas-
ury was bankrupt, and especially that the government of Virginia was
bad and would continue so until a radical change should be made in the
constitution of the new State.
Legal proceedings were now instituted by the ministers to ascer-
tain whether the company's charter had not been forfeited. The question
came before the judges, who had no difficulty in deciding that the violated
patent was null and void. In accordance with this decision, the charter
of the corporation was canceled by the king, and in June of 1624 the
London Company ceased to exist. But its work had been well done ; a
torch of liberty had been lighted on the banks of the James which all
the gloomy tyranny of after times could not extinguish. The \^irgin-
lans were not slow to remember and to claim ever afterward the precious
rights which were guaranteed in the constitution of 1621. And the
other colonies would be satisfied with nothing less than the chartered
pn^t.^ileges which were recognized in the laws of the Old Dominion.
114 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XII.
VIRGINIA.— THE ROYAL GOVERNMENT.
A ROYAL government was now established in Virginia. To the
colonists themselves the change of authorities was scarcely percepti-
ble. The new administration consisted of a governor and twelve coun-
cilors appointed by the crown. The General Assembly of the colony
was left undisturbed, and all the rights and privileges of the colonists
remained as before. Tlie king's hostility had been directed against the
London Company, and not against the State of Virginia ; now that the
former was destroyed the latter was left unmolested. Governor Wyatt
was continued in office; and in making up the new council the king
wisely took jjains to select the known friends of the colony rather than
certain untried partisans of his own court. The Virginians found in the
change of government as much cause of gratitude as of grief.
King James of England died in 1625. His son, Cliarles I., a young,
inexperienced and stubborn prince, succeeded to the throne. The new
king paid but little attention to the affairs of his American colony, until
the commerce in tobacco attracted his notice. Seeing in this product a
source of revenue for the crown, he attempted to gain a monopoly of the
trade, but the colonial authorities outwitted him and defeated the project
It is worthy of special note that while conferring with the colony on ihh\
subject the king recognized the Virginia assembly as a rightfully consti-
tuted power. The reply which M-as finally returned to the king's projiosal
was signed not only by the governor and council, but by thirty-one of the
burgesses.
In 1626 Governor Wyatt retired from office, and Yeardley, the old
friend and benefactor of the colonists, was reappointed. The young
State was never more prosperous than under this administration, which
was terminated by the governor's death, in November of 1627. During
the preceding summer a thousand new immigrants had come to swell th«
population of the growing province.
The council of Virginia had a right, in case of an emergency, to
elect a governor. Such an emergency was now present, and Francis
West was chosen by the councilors ; but as soon as the death of Yeardley
VIRGINIA.— THE ROYAL GOVERNMENT. 115
was known in England, King Charles commissioned John Harvey to
assume the government. He arrived in the autumn of 1629, and from
this time until 1635, the colony was distracted with the presence of a
most unpopular chief magistrate. He seems to have been disliked on
general principles, but the greatest source of dissatisfaction was his par-
tiality to certain speculatoi-s and land monopolists who at this time in-
fested Virginia, to the annoyance and injury of the poorer people. There
were many old land grants covering districts of territory which were now
occupied by actual settlers, and between the holders of the lands and the
holders of the titles violent altercations arose. In these disputes the
governor became a partisan of the speculators against the people, until
the outraged assembly of 1635 passed a resolution that Sir John Harvey
be thrust out of office, and Captain West be appointed in his place " until
the king's pleasure may be known in this matter." A majority of the
councilors sided with the burgesses, and Harvey was obliged to go to
England to stand his trial.
King Charles treated the whole affair with contempt. The com-
missioners appointed by the council of Virginia to conduct Harvey's im-
peachment were refused a hearing, and he was restored to the governor-
ship of the unwilling colony. He continued in power until the year
1639, when he was superseded by Wyatt, who ruled until the spring of
1642.
And now came the English Revolution. The exactions and tyranny
of Charles at last drove his subjects into open rebellion. In January of
1642, the king and his friends left London, and repairing to Nottingham,
collected an army of royalists. The capital and southern part of the
country remained in the power of Parliament. The High Church party
and the adherents of monarchy took sides with the king, while the re-
publicans and dissenters made up the opposing forces. The country was
plunged into the horrors of civil war. After a few years of conflict the
royal army was routed and dispersed ; the king escaped to Scotland, and
the leading royalists fled to foreign lands. On the demand of Parliament
Charles was given up and brought to trial. The cause was heard, a sen-
tence of death was passed, and on the 30th of January, 1649, the unhappy
monarch was beheaded.
Monarchy was now abolished. Oliver Cromwell, the general of
the Parliamentary army, was made Lord Protector of the Commonwealth
of England. By him the destinies of the nation were controlled until
his death, in 1658, when he was succeeded by his son Richard. But the
latter, lacking his father's abilities and courage, became alarmed at the
dangers that gathered around him, and resigned. For a few months the
116 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
country was in anarchy, until General Monk, who commanded the Eng-
lish army of the North, came down from Scotland and declared a restora-
tion of the monarchy. The exiled son of Charles I. was called home
and proclaimed king, the people acquiesced. Parliament sanctioned the
measure, and on the 18th of May, 1660, Charles II. was placed on the
throne of England.
These were times full of trouble. Virgmia shared in some degree
the distractions of the mother-country, yet the evil done to the new State
by the conflict in England was less than might have been expected. In
the first year of the civil war Sir William Berkeley became governor of
the colony, and, with the exception of a brief visit to England in 1645,
remained m office for ten years. His administration, notwitlistanding the
commotions abroad, was noted as a time of rapid growth and develop-
ment. The laws were greatly improved and made conformable to the
English statutes. The old controversies about the lands were satisfacto-
rily settled. Cruel punishments were abolished and the taxes equalized.
The general assembly was regularly convened to bear its part in the gov-
ernment, and Virginia was in all essential particulars a free as well as a
prosperous State. So rapid was the progress that in 1646 there were
twenty thousand people in the colony.
But there M^ere also drawbacks to the prosperity of Virginia. Re-
ligious intolerance came with its baleful shadow to disturb the State. The
faith of the Episcopal Church was established by law, and dissenting was
declared a crime. The Puritans were held in contempt by the people,
who charged them with being the destroyers of the peace of England.
In INIarch of 1643 a statute was enacted by the assembly declaring that
no person who disbelieved the doctrines of the English Church should be
allowed to teach publicly or privately, or to preach the gospel, within the
limits of Virginia. The few Puritans in the colony were excluded from
their places of trust, and some were even driven fi'om their homes. Gov-
ernor Berkeley, himself a zealous churchman, was a leader in these per-
secutions, by which all friendly relations with New England were broken
off for many years.
A worse calamity befell in a second war with the Indians. Early
in 1644, the natives, having forgotten their former punishment, and
believing that in the confusion of the civil war there still remained a hope
of destroying the English, planned a general massacre. On the 18th of
April, at a time when the authorities were somewhat off their guard, the
savages fell upon the frontier settlements, and before assistance could be
brought murdered three hundred people. Alarmed at their own atrocity,
tlie warriors then fled, but were followed by the English forces and
VIRGINIA.— THE ROYAL GOVERNMENT. 117
driven into the woods and swamps. The aged Opechancanough was cap-
tured, and died a prisoner. The tribes were chastised without mercy, and
were soon glad to purchase peace by the cession of large tracts of land.
The Virginians adhered with great firmness to the cause of Charles
I. in his war with Parliament, and after his death proclaimed the exiled
Cliarles 11. as rightful sovereign of the country. Cromwell and the
Parliament were much exasperated at this course of conduct, and mea-
sures were at once devised to bring the colony to submission. An ordi-
nance was passed laying heavy restrictions on the commerce of such
English colonies as refused to acknowledge the supremacy of Parliament.
All foreign ships, especially those of Holland, were forbidden to enter
the colonial harbors. In 1651 the noted statute called the Navigation
Act was passed, and the trade of the colonies was still more seriously
distressed. In this new law it was enacted that the foreign commerce
of Virginia, now grown into importance, should be carried on wholly in
English vessels, and directed exclusively to English ports.
The Virginians held out, and Cromwell determined to employ
force. A war-vessel called the Guinea was sent into the Chesapeake to
compel submission, but in the last extreme the Protector showed him-
self to be just as well as wrathful. There were commissioners. on board
the frigate authorized to make an offer of peace, and this was gladly
accepted. It was seen that the cause of the Stuarts was hopeless. The
people of Virginia, although reftising to yield to threats and violence,
cheerfully entered into negotiations with Cromwell's delegates, and ended
by acknowledging the supreme authority of Parliament. The terms of
the settlement were very favorable to popular libert}'-; the commercial
restrictions of the two previous years were removed, and the trade of the
colony was made as free as that of England. No taxes might be levied
or duties collected except such as were imposed by the general assembly
of the State. The freedom of an Englishman was guaranteed to every
citizen, and under the control of her own laws Virginia again grew pros-
perous.
No further difficulty arose during the continuance of the Common-
wealth. The Protector was busied with the affairs of Europe, and had
neither time nor disposition to interfere in the affairs of a remote colony.
The Virginians were thus left free to conduct their government as they
would. Even the important matter of choosing a governor was sub-
mitted to an election in the House of Burgesses ; when so great a power
had been once exercised, it was not likely to be relinquished without a
struggle. Three governors were chosen in this way, and what was at
first only a privilege soon became a right. Special acts of the assembly
118 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
declared that such a right existed, and that it should be transmitted to
posterity.
In 1660, just at the time of the resignation of Richard Cromwell,
Samuel Matthews, the last of the three elected governors, died. The
burgesses were immediately convened, and an ordinance was passed de-
claring that the supreme authority of Virginia was resident in the colony,
and would continue there until a delegate with proper credentials should
arrive from the British government. Having made this declaration, the
house elected as governor Sir William Berkeley, who by accepting the
office acknowledged the right of the burgesses to choose. The question
of recognizing Charles II. as king was debated at the same session, but
prudence suggested that the colonial authorities would better await the
natural course of events. For the present it was decided to remain faith-
ful to Parliament. Most of the people, no doubt, desired the restoration,
but policy forbade any open expressions of such a preference. It would
be time enough when monarchy was actually restored.
In May of 1660 Charles II. became king of England. As soon
as this event was known in Virginia, Governor Berkeley, forgetting the
source of his own authority, and in defiance of all consistency, issued wTits
in the name of the king for the election of a new assembly. The friends
of royalty were delighted with the prospect. The adherents of the Com-
monwealth were thrust out of office, and the favorites of the king estab-
lished in their places. Great benefits were expected from the change, and
the whole colony was alive with excitement and zeal. But the disap-
pointment of the people was more bitter than their hopes had been extrav-
agant. The Virginians soon found that they had exchanged a republican
tyrant with good principles for a monarchial tyrant with bad ones. King
Charles II. was the worst monarch of modern times, and the people of
Virginia had in him and his government a special cause of grief The
commercial system of the Commonwealth, so far from being abolished,
was re-enacted in a more hateful form than ever. The new statute pro-
vided that all the colonial commerce, whether exports or imports, should
be carried on in English ships, the trade between the colonies was bur-
dened with a heavy tax for the benefit of the government, and tobacco,
the staple of Virginia, could be sold nowhere but in England. This
odious measure gave to English merchantmen a monopoly of the carry-
ing trade of the colonies, and by destroying competition among the buy-
ers of tobacco robbed the Virginians to that extent of their leading
product. Remonstrance was tried in vain. The cold and selfish monarch
only sneered at the complaints of his American subjects, and the commer-
cial ordinances were rigorously enforced.
VIRGINIA.— THE ROYAL GOVERNMENT. 119
Charles II. seemed to regard the British empire as personal property
to be used for the benefit of himself and his courtiers. In order to reward
the worthless profligates who thronged his court, he began to grant to them
large tracts of land in Virginia. AVhat did it matter that these lands had
been redeemed from the wilderness and were covered with orchards and
gardens ? It was no uncommon thing for an American planter to find that
his farm, which had been cultivated for a quarter of a century, was given
away to some dissolute flatterer of the royal household. Great distress
was occasioned by these iniquitous grants, until finally, in 1673, the king
set a limit to his own recklessness by giving away the whole State. Lord
Culpepper and the earl of Arlington, two ignoble noblemen, received
under the great seal a deed by which was granted to them for thirty-
one years all the dominion of land and water called Virginia.
Unfortunately, the colonial legislation of these times became an
selfish and narrow-minded as the policy of the king was mean. An
"aristocratic party which had arisen in the colony obtained control of the
House of Burgesses, and the new laws rivaled those of England in illiber-
ality. Episcopalianism was again established as the State religion. A
proscriptive ordinance was passed against the Baptists, and the peace-lov-
ing Quakers were fined, persecuted and imprisoned. Burdensome taxes
were laid on personal property and polls ; the holders of large estates were
exempt and the poorer people afflicted. The salaries of the officers were
secured by a permanent duty on tobacco, and, worst of all, the biennial
election of burgesses was abolished, so that the members of the existing
assembly continued indefinitely in power. For a while Berkeley and his
council outdid the tyranny of England.
And then came open resistance. The people were worn out with
the governor's exactions, and availed themselves of the first pretext to
assert their rights by force of arms. A war with the Susquehanna In-
dians furnished the occasion for an insurrection. The tribes about the
head of Chesapeake Bay and along the Susquehanna had been attacked by
the Senecas and driven from their homes. They, in turn, fell upon the
English settlers of Maryland, and the banks of the Potomac became the
scene of a border war. Virginia and Maryland made common cause
against the savages. John "Washington, great-grandfather of the first
president of the United States, led a company of militia into the enemy's
country, and compelled the Susquehannas to sue for peace. Six of their
chieftains went into Virginia as ambassadors, and, to the lasting dishonor
of the colony, were foully murdered. This atrocity maddened the savages,
and a devastatino- warfare raa-ed along the whole frontier.
Governor Berkeley, not without some show of justice, sided with
120 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the Indians, But the colonists remembered only the many acts of
treachery and bloodshed of which the red men had before been guilty,
and were determined to have revenge. In this division of sentiment
among the people, the assembly and the aristocratic party took sides with
the governor and favored a peace; while the popular party, disliking
Berkeley and hating the Indians, resolved to overthrow him and destroy
them at one blow. A leader was found in that remarkable man, Nathaniel
Bacon. Young, brave, eloquent, patriotic, full of enthusiasm and energy,
he became the soul and life of the popular party. His own farm in the
county of Henrico had been pillaged and his tenants murdered by the
savages. Exasperated by these injuries, he was the more easily urged by
the public voice to accept the dangerous office of leading an insurrecfion.
Five hundred men rushed to arms and demanded to be led against
the Indians. Alarm, excitement and passion prevailed throughout the
colony. The patriot forces were organized ; and without permission of a
government which they had ceased to regard, the march was begun into
the enemy's country. Berkeley and the aristocratic faction were enraged
at this proceeding, and proclaimed Bacon a traitor. A levy of troops was
made for the purpose of dispersing the rebellious militia ; but scarcely had
Berkeley and his forces left Jamestown when another popular uprising in
the lower counties compelled him to return. Affairs were in an uproar.
Bacon came home victorious. The old assembly was unceremoniously
broken up, and a new one elected on the basis of universal suifrage.
Bacon w^as chosen a member for Henrico, and soon after elected com-
mander-in-chier of the Virginia army. The governor refused to sign his
commission, and Bacon appealed to the people ; the militia again flew to
arms, and Berkeley was compelled to yield. Not only was the com-
mission signed, but a paper drawn up by the burgesses in commendation
of Bacon's loyalty, zeal and patriotism received the executive signature
and was transmitted to Parliament.
Peace returned to the 'colony. The power of the savages was com-
pletely broken. A military force was stationed on the frontier, and a
sense of security returned to all the settlements. But Berkeley was petu-
lant, proud and vengeful ; and it was only a question of time when the
struggle would be renewed. Seizing the first opportunity^, the governor
left Jamestown and repaired to the county of Gloucester, on the north
side of York River. Here he summoned a convention of loyalists, who,
contrary to his expectations and wishes, advised moderation and com-
promise ; but the hot-headed old cavalier would yield no jot of his pre-
rogative to what he was pleased to call a rabble, and Bacon was again
proclaimed a traitor.
VIRGINIA.— THE ROYAL GOVERNMENT. 121
It was evident that there must be figlitiug. Berkeley and his
forces left Gloucester, crossed the Chesapeake Bay, and took station on
the eastern shore, in the county of Accomac. Here his trooj)s were
organized ; the crews of some English ships were joined to his command,
and the fleet set sail for Jamestown. The place was taken without much
resistance ; but when Bacon with a few companies of patriots drew near,
the loyal forces deserted and went over to his standard. The governor
with his adherents was again obliged to fly, and the capital remained in
possession of the people's party. The assembly was about to assume con-
trol of the government without the governor, whose flight to Accomac
had been declared an abdication, when a rumor arose that an English fleet
was approaching for the subjugation of the colonies. The j)atriot leaders
held a council, and it was determined that Jamestown should be burned.
Accordingly, in the dusk of the evening the torch was applied, and the
only town in Virginia laid in ashes. The leading men set the example
by throwing firebrands into their own houses ; others caught the spirit of
sacrifice ; the flames shot up through the shadows of night ; and Governor
Berkeley and his followers, on board a fleet twenty miles down the river,
had tolerably fair warning that the capital of Virginia could not be used
for the purposes of despotism.
In this juncture of affairs Bacon fell sick and died. It was an
event full of grief and disaster. The patriot party, discouraged by tlie
loss of the heroic chieftain, was easily dispersed. A few feeble efforts
were made to revive the cause of the people, but the animating spirit
which had controlled and directed until now was gone. The royalists
found an able leader in Robert Beverly, and the authority of the governor
was rapidly restored throughout the province. The cause of the people
and the leader of the people had died together.
Berkeley's vindictive passions were now let loose upon the defeated
insurgents. Fines and confiscations became the order of the day. The
governor seemed determined to drown the memory of his own wrongs in
the woes of his subjects. Twenty-two of the leading patriots were seized
and hanged with scarcely time to bid their friends farewell. Thus died
Thomas Hansford, the first American who gave hLs life for freedom.
Thus perished Edmund Cheesman, Thomas Wilford and the noble Wil-
liam Drumraond, martyrs to liberty. Nor is it certain when the vengeful
tyrant would have stayed his hand, had not the assembly met and parsed
an edict that no more blood should be spilt for past offences. One of the
burgesses from the county of Northampton said in the debate that if tlie
governor were let alone he would hang half the country. When diaries
II. heard of Berkeley's ferocity, he exclaimed, " The old fool has taken
122 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
away more lives in that naked country than I for the murder oi my
father" ; and the saying was true.
The history of this insurrection was for a long time reciifed by
Bacon's enemies. Until the present century no one appeared to rescue
the leader's name from obloquy. In the light of after times his character
will shine with a peculiar lustre. His motives were as exalted as his life
was pure, and his virtues as noted as his abilities were great. His ambi-
tion was for the public welfare, and his passions were only excited against
the enemies of his country.
The consequences of the rebellion were very disastrous. Berkeley
and the aristocratic party had now a good excuse for suppressing all liberal
sentiments and tendencies. The printing-press was interdicted. Educa-
tion was discouraged or forbidden. To speak or to write anything against
the administration or in defence of the late insurrection was made a crime
to be punished by fine or M^hipping. If the offence should be three times
repeated, it was declared to be treason punishable with death. The former
tyrannical methods of taxation were revived, and Virginia was left at the
mercy of arbitrary rulers.
In 1675, Lord Culpepper, to whom with Arlington the province
had been granted two years previously, obtained the appointment of
governor for life. The right of the king was thus by his own act relin-
quished, and Virginia became a proprietary government. The new execu-
tive arrived in 1680 and assumed the duties of his office. His whole
administration was characterized by avarice and dishonesty. Regarding
Virginia as his personal estate, he treated the Virginians as his tenants
and slaves. Every species of extortion was resorted to, until the nmtter-
ings of rebellion were again heard throughout the impoverished colony.
In 1683, Arlington surrendered his claim to Culpepper, who thus became
sole proprietor as well as governor ; but before he could proceed to further
mischief, his official career was cut short by the act of the king. Charles
II,, repenting of his own rashness, found in Culpepper's vices and frauds
a sufficient excuse to remove him from office and to revoke his patent.
In 1684, Virginia again became a royal province, under the government
of Lord Howard, of Effingham, mIio was succeeded by Francis Nich-
olson, formerly governor of New York. His administration was sig-
nalized by the founding of William and Mary College, so named
in honor of the new sovereigns of England. This, next to Harvard,
was the first institution of liberal learning planted in America. Here
the boy Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence, shall be
educated! From these halls, in the famous summer of 1776, shall be
sent forth young James Monroe, future President of the United States !
1600
11. Gustaviis Adolplius the Great.
Grotius.
Galileo. 18. The Thirty Years' War begins.
Kepler. 48. Peace of Westphalia.
24-42. Richelieu. 43. Louis XIV.
Shakespeare.
Bacon.
3. James VI. )
James I. J
25. Charles I. 42. The Revolution.
Milton.
49. Cromwell.
60. The Restoration.
89. Pete
9?
85. Revocation 1
87. Habeas c
Locke.
88. Secoii
88. Willia
of Mary, 94. \V
60. Charles II.
85. James 1
7.
9. Second Charter granted. 42. Berkeley's administration.
12. The Third Charter. 44. Indian massacre. 76. Bacon's Rebellion.
19. House of Burgesses established. 77. Virginia becomes
VIRGINIA colonized by the London 51. First \avigation Act. 84. Royal govt-
Company at Jamestown.
24. Dissolution of the 50.
London Company.
19. Introduction of Slavery.
John Smith, governor.
S3. Seth Sothc
NOETH OAEOLINA settled by the Englis
63. Grant made to Lord Clarendon.
85. Sir Johi
65. Sir John Yeamans, goverm
77. Culpepper's rebe
34.
MARYLAND settled by the Catho- 91. Ma
lies under Lord Baltimore. 75. Charles Calvert.
39. Representative government established. 92. L
: 38. Governor Kief. 64. Taken by the English. 91. Sl«
14. : NEW YORK settled by the Dutch. Berkeley and ciarteret. 92.
: 47. Stuyvesant. 70. Lovelace. 9
56. New York City founded. 74. Edmui
: 25. Minuits, governor. :
38. Wilmington settled by the Swedes. 82.:DELA'WAI'
23.
NEW JERSEY settled by the Dutch.
81. First General :
29. NEW HAMPSHIRE settled.
30. Boston founded.
79. : New Hampshire
: as a distinct colony.
30. : MAINE settled.
20. : MASSACHUSETTS settled by the Puritans at Plymouth.
: 30. Winthrop, governor.
: 38. Harvard College founded.
39. First printing-press set up at Cambridge.
76. King Philip's defe;.
84. Massach
90. First!
90. Kin I
92, Wit!
exc
36. : RHODE ISLAND settled by Roger Williams.
: 39. Newport founded. 87. Rhode
30.
37. Pequod War.
OONNEOTIOUT granted to the earl of Warwick.
35. Savbrook founded.
33. Hartford founded. 62. New charter granted.
89. The.lH
70.
^^UL
SOUTH OAROLINi
Locke's Constitution adu
86. Arrival
82.
PENNS"^:
the Qu:
92. Per,
1700
the Great.
Jharles XII.
War of the Spanish Succession.
Leibnitz.
13. Peace of Utrecht.
Mict of Nantes.
'US. 15. Louis XV.
ilevolutioi:.
and Mary, and after the death
fiam III.
2. Anne. 14. George I. 27. George II.
62. Catharine II.
40. Frederick the Great.
40. War of the Austrian Succession terminated
by 48. Peace of Aix-la-Chapelie. 89. French
Revolution.
93. Keign
Voltaire. 74. Louis XVI. "^ '^^"
ror.
Dr. Johnson. Burke.
(55. The Rockingham Ministrj'.
Newton. Chatham. Pi"-
55. War between France and England * "*•
65. The Stamp Act.
60. George III.
Proprietary government.
nent re-established.
32. Birth of Washington. 65. The Virginia: Resolutions.
(governor.
i 9. Arrival of the German immigrants.
Irchdale^ governor.
1 11. The Coree War.
kn.
29. Final separation of the Carolinas.
land becomes a royal government.
lel Copley.
<hter, governor.
Jtcher. 1. Cornbury.
Sellamont.
lAndros.
44. Negro plot. 58. Fall of Louisburg.
32. Cosby, governor. 65. Declaration: of Rights.
54. French and Indian : War.
65. First Colonial Congress assembles at New York.
separated from New York.
Union of East and West Jersey,
iembly.
Dr. Benjamin : Franklin.
38. Royal government established. :
United with Massachusetts. 41. : New Hampshire finally sepa- :
20. Introduction of tea. : rated from Mass. 67. The tea tax.
61. Writs of Assistance.
73. The Boston " Tea Party."
Ind death.
4. First newspaper.
;tts loses her charter,
iue of paper money
William's War.
2. Queen Anne's War.
•,raft 10. First pos^office.
nent.
44. King George's War.
45
75.
Lexington.
Louisburg taken. 74. Boston Port Bill.
68. General Gage arrives in Boston.
59.
[Quebec 75.
taken. 70.
Bunker Hill.
Tumult in Boston.
md joined to New York.
ng of the charter.
1. Yale College founded.
ettled by the English.
■d. 2. Expedition against St. Augustine.
he Huguenots. 29. Royal government established.
7ANIA settled by
;rs under Penu.
oses his commission.
55.
76. Independence.
Braddock's defeat.
74. Second Confess assem-
bles at Philadelphia.
33.
GEORGIA settled by the English :
under Oglethorpe. :
52. Royal government establi^bf^d.
3IASSA CHUSETTS.— SETTLEMENT. 123
After Nicholson's administration, Sir Edmund Andros, recently ex-
pelled by the people of Massachusetts, assumed for a while the gov-
ernment of Virginia. The affairs of the colony during the next forty
or fifty years are not of sufficient interest and importance to require
extended notice in an abridgment of American history. At the out-
break of the French and Indian "War, Virginia will show to the world
that the labors of Smith, and Gosnold, and Bacon have not been in
vain.
CHAPTER XIII.
MASS A CHVSETTS.— SETTLEMENT.
THE spring of 1621 brought a ray of hope to the distressed Pilgriws
of New Plymouth. Never was the returning sun more welcome.
The fatal winter had swept oif one-half of the number. The son of the
benevolent Carver was among the first victims of the terrible climate.
The governor himself sickened and died, and the broken-hearted wife
found rest in the same grave with her husband. But now, with the ap-
proach of warm weather, the destroying pestilence was stayed, and the
s])irits of the survivors revived with the season. Out of the snows of
winter, the desolations of disease, and the terrors of death the faith of the
Puritan had come forth triumphant.
For a while the colonists were apprehensive of the Indians. In
February, Miles Standish was sent out with his soldiers to gather in-
formation of the numbers and disposition of the natives. The army of
New England consisted of six men besides the general. Deserted v.-ig-
wams were found here and there ; the smoke of camp-fires arose in the
distance ; savages were occasionally seen iu the forest. These fled, how-
ever, at the approach of the English, and Standish returned to Plymouth.
A month later the colonists were astonished by the sudden appear-
ance in their midst of a Wampanoag Indian named Samoset. He ran
into the village, offered his hand in token of friendship, and bade the
strangers welcome. He gave an account of the numbers and strength of
the neighboring tribes, and recited the story of a great plague by which^
a few years before, the country had been swept of its inhabitants. The
present feebleness and desolate condition of the natives had resulted from
the fatal malady. Another Indian, by the name of Squanto, who had
been carried away by Hunt in 1614, and had learned to sjieak English,
came also to Plymouth, and confirmed what Samoset had said.
124
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
By the influence of these two natives friendly relations were at once
established with the Wampauoags. Massasoit, the great sachem of the
nation, was invited to visit the settlement, and came attended by a few
of his warriors. The Pilgrims received him with as much parade and
ceremony as the colony could provide ; Captain Standish ordered out his
tt)ldiers, and JSquanto acted as interpreter. Then and there was ratified
the first treaty made in New England. The terms were few and simple.
There should be peace and friendship between the whites and the red
men. No injury should be done by either party to the other. All
offenders should be given up to be punished. If the English engaged in
THE TREATY BETWEEN GOVERNOR CARVER AND MASSASOIT.
war, Massasoit should help them ; if the Wampanoags were attacked un-
justly, the English should give aid against the common enemy. Mark
that word unjiLstly : it contains the essence of Puritanism.
The treaty thus made and ratified remained inviolate for fifty years.
Other chiefs followed the example of the great sachem and entered into
friendly relations with the colony. Nine of the leading tribes acknow-
ledged the sovereignty of the English king. One chieftain threatened
hostilities, but Standish's army obliged him to beg for mercy. Canonlms,
kins: of the Narraa;ansetts, sent to William Bradford, who had been chosen
governor after the death of Carver, a bundle of arrows wrapped in the
skin of a rattlesnake ; but the undaunted governor stuffed the skin with
MASS A CHUSETTS.— SETTLEMENT. 1 25
powder and balls and sent it back to the chief, who did not dare to accept
the dangerous challenge. The hostile emblem was borne about from tribe
to tribe, until finally it was returned to Plymouth.
The summer of 1621 was unfruitful, and the Pilgrims were brought
to the point of starvation. To make their condition still more grievous,
a new company of immigrants, ^\'ithout provisions or stores, arrived, and
were quartered on the colonists dui'ing the fall and winter. For six
months together the settlers were obliged to subsist on half allowance.
At one time only a few grains of parched corn remained to be distributed,
and at another there was absolute destitution. In this state of affairs some
Enghsh fishing-vessels came to Plymouth and charged the starving colo-
nists two prices for food enough to keep them alive.
The intruding immigrants just mentioned had been sent to America
by Thomas Weston, of London, one of the projectors of the colony. They
remained with the people of Plymouth until the summer of 1622, then
removed to the south side of Boston Harbor and began a new settlement
Ciilled Weymouth. Instead of working with their might to provide
against starvation, they wasted the fall in idleness, and attempted to keep
up their stock of j^rovisions by defrauding the Indians. Thus provoked
to hostilit}^, the natives formed a plan to destroy the colony ; but Massa-
soit, faithful to his pledges, went to Plymouth and revealed the plot.
Standish marched to Weymouth at the head of his regiment, now in-
creased to eight men, attacked the hostile tribe, killed several M^arriors
and carried home the chief's head on a pole. The tender-hearted John
Robinson wrote from Leyden : " I would that you had converted some
of them before you killed any."
In the following spring most of the Weymouth settlers abandoned
the place and returned to England. The summer of 1623 brought a
plentiful harvest to the people of the older colony, and there was no
longer any danger of starvation. The natives, preferring the chase, be-
came dependent on the settlement for corn, and furnished in exchange an
abundance of game. The main body of Pilgrims still tarried at Leyden.
Robinson made unwearied efforts to bring his people to America, but the
adventurers of London who had managed the enterprise would provide
no further means either of money or transportation ; and now, at the end
of the fourth year, there were only a hundred and eighty persons in New
England. The managers had expected profitable returns, and were dis-
appointed. They had expended thirt}''-four thousand dollars; tliore
was neither profit nor the hope of any. Under this discouragement the
proprietors made a proposition to sell out their claims to the colonists.
The offer was accepted; and in November of 1627 eight of the leading
126 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
men of Plymouth purchased from the Londoners their entire interest for
the sum of nine thousand dollars.
Before this transfer of right was made the colony had been much
vexed by the efforts of the managers to thrust on them a minister of the
Established Church. Was it not to avoid this very thing that they had
come to the wilds of the New World ? Should the tyranny of the prelates
follow them even across the sea and into the wilderness ? There was dis-
sension and strife for a while ; the English managers withheld support ;
oppression was resorted to; the stores intended for the colonists were
sold to them at three prices ; and they were obliged to borrow money at
sixty per cent. But no exactions could break the spirit of the Pilgrims ;
and the conflict ended with the purchase of whatever rights the London
proprietors had in the colony.
The year 1624 was marked by the founding of a settlement at
Cape Ann. John White, a Puritan minister of Dorchester, England,
collected a small company of emigrants and sent them to America. The
colony was established, but after two years of discouragement the cape
was abandoned as a place unsuitable, and the company moved farther
south to Naumkeag, afterward called Salem. Here a settlement was
begun, and in 1628 was made permanent by the arrival of a second colony,
in charge of John Endicott, who was chosen governor. In March of the
same year the colonists obtained a patent from the Council of Plymouth ;
and in 1629 Charles I. issued a charter by which the proprietors were
incorporated under the name of The Governor and Company of
Massachusetts Bay in New England. In July two hundred ad-
ditional immigrants arrived, half of whom settled at Plymouth, while the
other half removed to a peninsula on the north side of Boston Harbor
and laid the foundation of Charlestown.
At the first it had been decided that the charter of the colony
should be left in England, and that the governor should reside there also.
After further discussion, this decision was reversed, and in September it
was decreed that the whole government should be transferred to America,
and that the charter, as a pledge of liberty, should be entrusted to the
colonists themselves. As soon as this liberal action was made known
emigration began on an extensive scale. In the year 1630 about three
hundred of the best Puritan families in the kingdom came to New Eng-
land. Not adventurers, not vagabonds, were these brave people, but vir-
tuous, well-educated, courageous men and women who for conscience'
sake left comfortable homes with no expectation of returning. It was not
the least of their good fortune to choose a noble leader.
If ever a man was worthy to be held in perpetual remembrance,
MASSACHUSETTS.— SETTLEMENT.
127
that man was John Winthrop, governor of Massachusetts. Bom a royalist,
he cherished the principles of republicanism. Himself an Episcopalian,
he chose affliction
with the Puritans.
Surrounded \vith
affluence and com-
fort, he left all to
share the destiny
of the persecuted
Pilgrims. Calm,
prudent and peace-
able, he joined the
zeal of an enthusi-
ast with the sub-
lime faith of a
martyr.
A part of
the new immi-
grants settled at
Salem ; others at
Cambridge and
Watertown, on
Charles River;
while others, going
farther south,
founded Roxbury and Dorchester. The governor, with a few of the
leading families, resided for a while at Charlestown, but soon crossed
the harbor to the peninsula of Shawmut and laid the foundation of Bos-
ton, which became henceforth the capital of the colony and the metropolis
of New England. With the approach of winter sickness came, and the
distress was very great. Many of the new-comers were refined and ten-
der people who could not endure the bitter blasts of Massachusetts Bay.
Coarse fare and scanty provisions added to the griefs of disease. Sleet
and snow drifted through the cracks of the thin board huts where en-
feebled men and delicate women moaned out their lives. Before mid-
winter two hundred had perished. A few others, heartsick and despair-
ing, returned to England; but there was heard neither murmur nor
repining. Governor Winthrop wrote to his wife : " I like so well to be
here that I do not repent my coming."
At a session of the general court of the colony, held in 1631, a law
was passed restricting the right of suffrage. It was enacted that none but
JOHN WINTHROP.
128 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
members of the church should be permitted to vote at the colonial elec-
tions. The choice of governor, deputy-governor and assistant councilors
was thus placed in the hands of a small minority. Nearly three-fourths
of the people were excluded from exercising the rights of freemen. Taxes
were levied for the support of the gospel ; oaths of obedience to the magis-
trates were required ; attendance on public worship was enforced by law ;
none but church-members were eligible to offices of trust. It is strange
indeed that the ver}'- men who had so recently, through perils by sea and
land, escaped with only their lives to find religious freedom in another
continent, should have begun their career with intolerance and proscrip-
tion. The only excuse that can be found for the gross inconsistency and
injustice of such legislation is that bigotry was the vice of the age rather
than of the Piu'itans.
One manly voice was lifted up against this odious statute. It was
the voice of young Koger Williams, minister of Salem. To this man
belongs the shining honor of being first in America or in Europe to pro-
claim the full gospel of religious toleration. He declared to his people
that the conscience of man may in no wise be bound by the authority of
the magistrate ; that civil government has only to do with civil matters,
such as the collection of taxes, the restraint and punishment of crime,
and the protection of all men in the enjoyment of equal rights. For
these noble utterances he was obliged to quit the ministr}- of the church
at Salem and retire to Plymouth. Finally, in 1634, he wTote a paper in
which the declaration was made that grants of laud, though given by the
king of England, were invalid until the natives were justly recompensed.
This was equivalent to saying that the colonial charter itself was void, and
that the people were really living upon the lands of the Indians. Great
excitement Avas occasioned by the publication, and Williams consented
that for the sake of public peace the paper should be burned. But he
continued to teach his doctrines, saying that compulsor}^ attendance at re-
ligious worship, as well as taxation for the support of the ministry, was
contrary to the teachings of the gospel. When arraigned for these bad
doctrines, he crowned his oflPences by telling the court that a test of
."hurch-membership in a voter or a public officer was as ridiculous as the
selection of a doctor of physic or the pilot of a ship on account of his skill
in theology.
These assertions raised such a storm in court that Williams was
condemned for heresy and banished from the colony. In the dead of
winter he left home and became an exile in the desolate forest. Fof four-
teen weeks he wandered on through the snow, sleeping at night on the
ground or in a hollow tree, living on parched corn, acorns and roots. He
MASS A CHUSETTS.— SETTLEMENT.
129
carried with him one precious treasure — a private letter from Governor
Wintlirop, giving him words of cheer and encouragement. Nor did the
Indians fail to show their gratitude to the man who had so nobly de-
fended their rights. In the country of the Wampanoags he was kindly
entertained. JNIassasoit invited hun to his cabin at Pokanoket, and
BOGEE WILLIAMS' EECEPTION BY THE INDIANS.
Canonicus, king of the Narragansctts, received him as a friend and
brother. On the left bank of Blackstone River, near the head of Narra-
gansett Bay, a resting-place was at last found ; the exile pitched his tent,
and with the opening of spring planted a field and built the first house in
the village of Seekonk. Soon the information came that he was still
within the territory of Plymouth colony, and another removal became
necessary. With five companions who had joined him in banishment,
he embarked in a canoe, passed down the river and crossed to the west
side of the bay. Plere he was safe; his enemies could hunt him no
farther. A tract of land was honorably purchased from Canonicus ; and
in June of 1636, the illustrious founder of Rhode Island laid out the city
of Providence.
Meanwhile, his teachings were bearing fruit in Massachusetts. In
1634 a representative form of government was established against the
opposition of the clergy. On election-day the voters, now numbering
between three and four hundred, were called together, and the learned
130 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Cotton preached powerfully and long against the pro{K)sed change. The
assen^bly listened attentively, and then went on with the election. To
make the reform complete, a ballot-box was substituted for the old
method of public voting. The restriction on the right of suffrage was
the only remaining bar to a perfect system of self-government in New-
England.
During the next year three thousand new immigrants arrived. It
was worth while — so thought the people of England — to come to a country
where the principles of freedom were spreading with such rapidity. The
new-comers were under the leadership of Hugh Peters and Sir Henry
Vane ; the former the Puritan pastor of some English exiles at Rotter-
dam, in Holland, and the^latter a young nobleman who afterward played
an important part in the history of England. Such was his popularity
with the people of Massachusetts, and such his zeal and piety, that in less
than a year after his arrival he was chosen governor of the colony.
By this time the settlements around Massachusetts Bay were
thickly clustered. Until new homes should be found there was no room
for the immigrants who were constantly coming. To enlarge the frontier,
to plunge into the wilderness and find new places of abode, became a
necessity. One little company of twelve families, led by Simon Willard
and Peter Bulkeley, marched through the woods until they came to some
open meadows sixteen miles from Boston, and there laid the foundations
of Concord. A little later in the same year, another colony of sixty per-
sons left the older settlements and pressed their way westward as far as
the Connecticut River. The march itself was a grievous hardship, but
greater toils and sufferings were in store for the adventurous company.
A dreadful winter overtook them in their new homes but half provided.
Some died ; others, disheartened, waded back through the dreary untrod-
den snows and came half famished to Plymouth and Boston; but the
rest, with true Puritan heroism, outbraved the winter and triumphed over
the pangs of starvation. Spring brought a recompense for hardship : the
heroic pioneers crept out of their miserable huts to become the foundei-s
of Windsor, Hartford and Wethersfield, the oldest towns in the Con-
necticut valley.
The banishment of Roger Williams, instead of bringing peace,
brought strife and dissension to the people of Massachusetts. The minis-
ters were stern and exacting. Every shade of popular belief was closely
scrutinized; the slightest departure from orthodox doctrines was met
with a charge of heresy, and to be a heretic was to become an outcast.
Still, the advocates of free opinion multiplied. The clergy, notwithstand-
mg their great influence among the people, felt insecure. Religious de-
MASSA CHUSETTS.— SETTLEMENT.
131
MAP OF EABIiY SETTLEMENTS IN NEW ENGLAND.
bates became the order of the day. Every sermon had to pass the ordeal
of review and criticism.
Most prominent among those who were said to be "as bad as
Roger Williams, or worse," was Mrs. Anne Hutchinson, a woman of
genius who had come over in the ship with Sir Henry Vane. She de-
sired the privilege of speaking at the weekly debates, and was refused.
"Women had no business at these assemblies, said the elders. Indignant
at this, she became the champion of her sex, and declared that the minis-
ters who were defrauding women of the gospel were no better than Phari-
sees. She called meetings of her friends, spoke much in public, and
pleaded with great fervor for the full freedom of conscience. The liberal
doctrines of the exiled Williams were reaffirmed with more power and
eloquence than ever. Many of the magistrates were converted to the new
beliefs ; the governor himself espoused the cause of Mrs. Hutchinson j
and a majority of the people of Boston inclined to her opinions.
For a while there was a reign of discord; but as soon as Sir
Henry's term of office expired a call was issued for a meeting of the
synod of New England. The body convened in August of 1637; a
132 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
decree was proposed; Mrs. Hutchinson and her friends were declared
unfit for the society of Christians, and banished from the territory of
Massachusetts. With a large number of friends the exiles wended their
w^ay toward the home of Roger Williams. Miantonomoh, a Narragansett
chieftain, made them a gift of the beautiful island of Rhode Island;
there, in the month of March, 1641, a little republic was established, in
whose constitution freedom of conscience was guaranteed and persecution
for opinion' sake forbidden.
The ear 1636 was an important epoch in the history of Massa-
chusetts. The general court of the colony passed an act appropriating
between one and two thousand dollars to found and endow a college.
The measure met with popular favor; the Puritans were an educated
people, and were quick to appreciate the advantages of learning. New-
town was selected as the site of the proposed school. Plymouth and
Salem gave gifts to help the enterprise ; and from villages in the Con-
necticut valley came contributions of corn and wampum. In 1638, John
Harvard, a young minister of Charlestown, died, bequeathing his library
and nearly five thousand dollars to the school. To perpetuate the memory
of the noble benefactor the new institution was named Harvard Col-
lege ; and in honor of the place where the leading men of Massachusetts
had been educated, the name of Newtown was changed to Cambridge.
Thus early did the people of New England stamp their approval on the
cause of education. In spite of sterile soil and desolate landscapes —
in spite of destroying climate and wasting diseases — in spite even of
superstition and bigotry — the people who educate will ever be great
and free.
The PRINTING-PRESS came also. In 1638, Stephen Daye, an
English printer, arrived at Boston, bringing a font of typas, and in the
following year set up a press at Cambridge. The first American publica-
tion was an almanac calculated for New England, and bearing date of
1639. During the next year, Thomas Welde and John Eliot, two minis-
ters of Roxbury, and Richard Mather, of Dorchester, translated the
Hebrew Psalms into English verse, and published their rude work in
a volume of three hundred pages — the first book printed on this side
of the Atlantic.
The rapid gro^vth of Massachusetts now became a source of alarm
to the English government. Those liberal principles of religion and
politics which were openly avowed and gloried in by the citizens of the
new commonwealth were hateftil to Charles I. and his ministers. The
archbishop of Canterbury vras much offended. Something must be
done to check the further growth of the Puritan colonies. The first
MASSACHUSETTS.— THE UNION. 133
measure which suggested itself was to stop emigration. For this purpose
an edict was issued as early as 1634, but was of no effect. The officers
of the government neglected to enforce the law. Four years later, more
vigorous measures were adopted. A squadron of eight vessels, ready to
sail from London, was detained by the royal authority. Many of the
most prominent Puritan families in England were on board of these
ships. Historians of high rank have asserted — but without sufficient
proof — that John Hampden and Oliver Cromwell were of the number
who were turned back by the detention. At all events, it would have
been the part of wisdom in King Charles to allow all Puritans to leave
his realm as fast as possible. By detaining them in England he only
made sure the Revolution, and by so much hastened his own downfall.
CHAPTER Xiy.
MASSACHUSETTS.— THE UNION.
"VTEW ENGLAND was fast becoming a nation. Wellnigh fifty towns
-^^ and villages dotted the face of the country. Nearly a million of
dollars had been spent in settling and developing the new State. Enter-
prises of all kinds were rife. Manufactures, commerce and the arts were
rapidly introduced. William Stephens, a shipbuilder who came with
Governor Winthrop to Boston, had already built and launched an Ameri-
can vessel of four hundred tons burden. Before 1640, two hundred and
ninety-eight emigrant ships had anchored in Massachusetts Bay. Twenty-
one thousand two hundred people, escaping from English intolerance of
Church or State, had found home and rest between Plymouth Rock and
the Connecticut valley. It is not wonderful that the colonists began to
cast about them for better political organization and more ample forma
of government.
Many circumstances impelled the colonies to union. First of all,
there was the natural desire of men to have a regular and permanent
government. England, torn and distracted with civil war, could do
nothing for or against her colonies ; they must take care of themselves.
Here was the western frontier exposed to the hostilities of the Dutch
towns on the Hudson ; Connecticut alone could not defend herself.
Similar trouble was apprehended from the French on the north ; the
134 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
English settlements on the Piscataqua were weak and defenceless. In-
dian tribes capable of mustering a thousand warriors were likely at any
hour to fall upon remote and helpless villages ; the prevalence of common
interests and the necessities of common defence made a union of some sort
indispensable.
The first effort to consolidate the colonies was ineffectual. Two
years later, in 1639, the project was renewed, but without success.
Again, in 1643, a measure of union was brought forward and finally
adopted. By the terms of this compact, Massachusetts, Plymouth, Con-
necticut and New Haven were joined in a loose confederacy, called The
United) Colonies of New England. The chief authority was con-
ferred upon a general assembly, or congress, composed of two representa-
tives from each colony. These delegates were chosen annually at an
election where all the freemen voted by ballot. There was no president
other than the speaker of the assembly, and he had no executive powers.
Each community retained, as before, its separate local existence ; and all
subordinate questions of legislation were reserved to the respective colo-
nies. Only matters of general interest — such as Indian affairs, the levy-
ing of troops, the raising of revenues, declarations of war and treaties of
peace — were submitted to the assembly.
Provision was made for the admission of other colonies into the
union, but none were ever admitted. The English settlement on the
Piscataqua was rejected because of heterodoxy in religion. The Provi-
dence Plantations were refused for similar reasons. Should Roger Wil-
liams return to plague an assembly where an approved church-member-
ship was the sole qualification for office? The little island of Rhode
Island, with its Jewish republic, also knocked for admission ; Anne
Hutchinson's commonwealth was informed that Plymouth colony had
rightful jurisdiction there, and that heresy was a bar to all petitions.
Until the year 1641 the people of Massachusetts had had no regular
code of laws. At a meeting of the assembly in December of this year,
Nathaniel Ward brought forward a ^\Titten instrument which, after ma-
ture deliberation, was adopted as the constitution of the State. This
fundamental statute was called the Body of Liberties, and was ever
afterward esteemed as the great charter of colonial freedom. It may be
doubted whether any other primitive constitution, either ancient or
modern, contains more wisdom than this early code of IMassachusetts.
A further modification in the government was effected in 1644.
Until this time the representatives of the people had sat and voted in the
same hall with the governor and his assistant magistrates. It was now
decreed that the two bodies should sit apart, each with its own officers
MASSACHUSETTS.— THE UNION. 135
and under its own management. By this measure the people's branch of
the legislature was made independent and of equal authority with the
governor's council. Thus step by step were the safeguards of liberty
established and regular forms of government secured.
The people of Massachusetts were little grieved on account of the
English Revolution. It was for them a vindication and a victory. The
triumph of Parliament over King Charles was the triumph of Puritanism
both in England and America. Massachusetts had no cause to fear so
long as the House of Commons was crowded with her friends and patrons.
But in the hour of victory the American Puritans showed themselves
more magnanimous than those of the mother-country ; when Charles I.,
the enemy of all colonial liberties, was brought to the block, the people
of New England, whose fathers had been exiled by Ms father, lamented
his tragic fate and preserved the memory of his virtues.
During the supremacy of the Long Parliament several acts were
passed which put in peril the interests of Massachusetts, but by a prudent
and far-sighted policy all evil results were avoided. Powerful friends,
especially Sir Henry Vane, stood up in Parliament and defended the
colony against the intrigues of her enemies. Ambassadors, men of age
and experience, went often to London to plead for colonial rights. Soon
after the abolition of monarchy a statute was made which threatened for
a while the complete subversion of the new State. Massachusetts M-as in-
vited to surrender her charter, to receive a new instrument instead, and
to hold courts and issue writs in the name of Parliament. The measure
seemed fair enough, but the people of New England were too cautious to
stake their all on the fate of a Parliament whose power was already
waning. The requisition was never complied with. Cromw^ell did not
insist on the surrender ; no one else had power to enforce the act ; and
Massachusetts retained her charter.
The Protector was the constant friend of the American colonies.
Even Virginia, though slighting his authority, found him just as well as
severe. The people of New England were his special favorites. To them
he was bound by every tie of political and religious sympathy. For more
than ten years, when he might have been an oppressor, he continued the
benefactor, of the English in America. During his administration the
northern colonies were left in the full enjoyment of their coveted rights.
In commerce, in the industry of private life, and especially in religion,
the people of Massachusetts were as free as the people of England.
In the year 1652, it was decreed by the general court at Boston
that the jurisdiction of the province extended as far north as three miles
above the most northerly waters of the river Merrimac. This declaration,
136 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
which was in strict accordance with the charter of the colony, was made
for the purpose of annexing Maine to Massachusetts. By this measure
the territory of the latter State was extended to Casco Bay. Settlements
had been made on the Piscataqua as early as 1626, but had not flourished.
Thirteen years later a royal charter was issued to Sir Ferdinand Gorges,
a member of the Council of Plymouth, who became proprietor of the
province. His cousin, Thomas Gorges, was made deputy-governor. A
high-sounding constitution, big enough for an empire, was drawn up, and
the little village of Gorgeana, afterward York, became the capital of the
kingdom. Meanwhile, in 1630, the Plymouth Council had granted to
another corporation sixteen hundred square miles of the territory around
Casco Bay, and this claim had been purchased by Eigby, a rej)ublican
member of Parliament. Between his deputies and those of Gorges violent
disputes arose. The villagers of Maine, sympathizing with neither party,
and emulous of the growth and prosperity of the southern colonies, laid
their grievances before the court at Boston, and the annexation of the
province followed.
In July of 1656, the Quakers began to arrive at Boston. The
first who came were Ann Austin and Mary Fisher. The introduction of
the plague would have occasioned less alarm. The two women were caught
and searched for marks of witchcraft, their trunks were broken open,
their books were burned by the hangman, and they themselves thrown
into prison. After several weeks' confinement they were brought forth
and banished from the colony. Before the end of the year eight others
had been arrested and sent back to England. The delegates of the union
were immediately convened, and a rigorous law was passed, excluding all
Quakers from the country. Whipping, the loss of one ear and banish-
ment were the penalties for the first offence ; after a second conviction the
other ear should be cut off; and should the criminal again return, liis
tongue should be bored through with a red-hot iron.
In 1657, Ann Burden, who had ojrae from London to preach
against persecution, was seized and beaten with twenty stripes. Others
came, were whipped and exiled. As the law became more cruel and
prescriptive, fresh victims rushed forward to brave its terrors. The
assembly of the four colonies again convened, and advised the authorities
of Massachusetts to pronounce the penalty of death against the fanatical
disturbers of the public peace. When the resolutions embodying this ad-
vice was put before the assembly, to his everlasting honor, the younger
Winthrop, delegate from Connecticut, voted No ! Massachusetts ac-
cepted the views of the greater number, and the death-penalty was passed
by a majority of one vote.
MASSACHUSETTS.— THE UNION. 137
In September of 1659, four persons were arrested and brought to
trial under this law. The prisoners were given the option of going into
exile or of being hanged. Two of them (Mary Dyar and Nicholas Davis)
chose banishment ; but the other two (Marmaduke Stephenson and Wil-
liam Robinson) stood firm, denounced the wickedness of the court, and
were sentenced to death. Mary Dyar, in whom the love of mai-tyrdom
had triumphed over fear, now returned, and was also condemned. On
the 27th of October the three were led forth to execution. The men
were hanged without mercy; and the woman, after the rope had been
adjusted to her neck, was reprieved only to be banished. She was con-
veyed beyond the limits of the colony, but immediately returned and was
executed. "William Leddra was next seized, tried and sentenced. As in
the case of the others, he was offered perpetual exile instead of death.
He refused, and was hanged.
Before the trial of Leddra was concluded, Wenlock Christison,
who had already been banished, rushed into the court-room and began to
upbraid the judges for shedding the blood of the innocent. When put on
his second trial, he spoke boldly in his own defence ; but the jury brought
in a verdict of guilty, and he was condemned to die. Others, eager for
the honor of martyrdom, came forward in crowds, and the jails were filled
with voluntary prisoners. But before the day arrived for Christison's exe-
cution, the public conscience was aroused; the law was repealed, the prison-
doors were opened, and Christison, with twenty-seven companions, came
forth free. The bloody reign of proscription had ended, but not until four
innocent enthusiasts had given their lives for liberty of conscience.
But let a veil be drawn over this sorrowful event. The history of
all times is full of scenes of violence and wrong. It could not be ex-
pected that an American colony, founded by exiles, pursued with malice
and beset with dangers, should be wholly exempt from the shame of evil
deeds. The Puritans established a religious rather than a civil common-
wealth ; whatever put the faith of the people in peril seemed to them
more to be dreaded than pestilence or death. To ward off heresy, even
by destroying the heretic, seemed only a natural self-defence. A nobler
lesson has been learned in the light of better times.
The English Revolution had now run its course. Cromwell was
dead. The Commonwealth tottered and fell. Charles II. was restored to
the throne of his ancestors. Tidings of the Restoration reached Boston
on the 27th of July, 1660. In the same vessel that bore the news came
Edward Whalley and William Goffe, two of the judges who had passed
sentence of death on Charles I. It was now their turn to save their lives
by flight. Governor Endicott received them with courtesy ; the agents
138 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
from the British government came in hot pursuit with orders to arrest
them. For a while the fugitives, aided by the people of Boston, baffled
the officers, and then escaped to New Haven. Here for many weeks
they lay in concealment ; not even the Indians would accept the reward
which was offered for their apprehension. At last the exiles reached the
valley of the Connecticut and found refuge at the village of Hadley,
where they passed the remainder of their lives. It was in October of this
same fatal year that Hugh Peters, the old friend of the colony, the father-
in-law of the younger Winthrop, waa hanged at London. The noble Sir
Henry Yane was hunted down in Holland, surrendered to the English
government, condemned and beheaded.
Owing to the partiality of Cromwell, the restrictions on colonial
commerce which bore so heavily on Virginia were scarcely felt by Massa-
chusetts. On the restoration of monarchy a severer policy was at once
adopted. All vessels not bearing the English flag were forbidden to
enter the harbors of New England. A law of exportation was enacted
by Avhich all articles produced in the colonies and demanded in England
should be shipped to England only. Such articles of American produc-
tion as the English merchants did not desire might be sold in any of the
ports of Europe. The law of importation was equally odious; such
articles as were produced in England should not be manufactured in
America, and should be bought from England only. Free trade between
the colonies was forbidden ; and a duty of five per cent., levied for the
benefit of the English king, was put on both exports and imports.
Human ingenuity could hardly have invented a set of measures better
calculated to produce an American Revolution.
In 1664, war broke out between England and Holland. It became
a part of the English military plans to reduce the Dutch settlements on
the Hudson ; and for this purpose a fleet was sent to America. But there
Avas another purpose also. Charles II. was anxious to obtain control of
the New England colonies, that he might govern them according to the
principles of arbitrary power. The chief obstacle to this undertaking
was the charter of IMassachusetts — an instrument given under the great
seal of England, and not easily revoked. To accomplish the same end by
other means was now the object of the king ; and with this end in view
four commissioners were appointed with instructions to go to America, to
sit in judgment upon all matters of complaint that might arise in New
England, to settle colonial disputes, and to take such other measures as
might seem most likely to establish peace and good order in the country.
The royal commissioners embarked in the British fleet, and in July ar-
rived at Boston.
3IASSACnUSETTS.—KING PHILIP'S WAR. 139
They were not wanted at Boston. The people of Massachusetts
knew very well that the establishment of this supreme judgeship in their
midst was a flagrant violation of their chartered right of self-government.
Before the commissioners landed the patent was put into the hands of a
committee for safe keeping. A decree of the general court forbade the
citizens to answer any summons issued by the royal judges. A powerful
letter, full of loyalty and manly protests, was sent directly to the Icing.
The commissioners became disgusted with the treatment which they re-
ceived at the hands of the refractory colony, and repaired to Maine and
New Hampshire. Here they were met with some marks of favor ; but
their official acts were disregarded and soon forgotten. In Rhode Island
the judges were received with great respect, and their decisions accepted
as the decisions of the king. The towns of Connecticut were next
visited ; but the people were cold and indifferent, and the commissioners
retired. Meanwhile, the English monarch, learning how his grand judges
liad been treated, sent a message of recall, and before the end of the year
they gladly left tlie country. After a gallant fight, Massachusetts had
preserved her liberties. Left in the peaceable enjoyment of her civil
rights, she entered upon a new career of prosperity which, for a period
of ten years, was marked with no calamity.
CHAPTER XV.
MASSACHUSETTS.— KING PHILIP'S WAR.
MASSASOIT, the old sachem of the Wampanoags, died in 1662. For
forty-one years he had faithfully kept the treaty made by himself
with the first settlers at Plymouth. His elder son, Alexander, now be-
came chief of the nation, but died within the year ; and the chieftainship
descended to the vounger brother, Philip of Mount Hope. It was
the fate of this brave and able man to lead his people in a final and hope-
less struggle against the supremacy of the whites. Caus&s of war had
existed for many years, and the time had come for the conflict.
The unwary natives of New England had sold their lands. The
English were the purchasers ; the chiefs had signed the deeds ; the pri(ie
had been fairly paid. Year by year the territory of the tribes had nar-
rowed ; the old men died, but the deeds remained and the lands could
not be recovered There were at this time in the country east of the
140
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Hudson not more than twenty-five thousand Indians; the English had
increased to fully twice that number. A new generation had arisen who
could not understand the validity of the old titles. The young warriors
sighed for the freedom of their fathers' hunting-grounds. They looked
with ever-increasing jealousy on the growth of English villages and the
spread of English farms. The ring of the foreigner's axe had scared the
game out of the forest, and the foreigner's net had scooped the fishes from
the red man's river. Of all their ancient domain, the Wampanoags had
nothing left but the two narrow peninsulas of Bristol and Tiverton, on
the eastern coast of Narragansett Bay.
There were personal grievances also. While Alexander lived he
had been arrested, tried by an English jury and imprisoned. He had
caught his death-fever in a Boston jail. Another chieftain was appre-
hended in a similar way ; and then the Indian witness who appeared at
the trial was murdered for giving testimony. The perpetrators of this
crime were seized by the English, convicted and hanged. Perhaps King
Philip, if left to himself, would have still sought peace. He was not a
rash man, and clearly foresaw the inevitable issue of the struggle. He
hesitated, and was affected with great grief when the news came that an
Englishman had been killed. But the young men of the tribe were
thirsting for bloody revenge, and could no longer be restrained. The
women and children were hastily sent across the bay and put under the
__ _ protection of Canonchet, king of the
Narragansetts. On the 24th of June,
1675, the village of Swanzey wiis
attacked ; eight Englishmen were
killed; and the alarm of war sound-
ed through the colonies.
Within a week the militia of
Plymouth, joined by volunteer com-
panies from Boston, entered the
enemy's country. A few Indians
were overtaken and killed. The
troops marched into the peninsula
of Bristol, reached Mount Hope,
and compelled Philip to fly for his
life. With a band of fugitives
numbering five or six hundred, he
escaped to Tiverton, on the eastern side of the bay. Plere, a few days
afterward, they were attacked ; but lying concealed in a swamp, they beat
back their assailants with considerable loss. The place was then sur-
FIKST SCENE OF KING PHILIP'S WAR.
MASSACHUSETTS.— KING PHILIP'S WAR.
141
rounded and besieged for two weeks; but Philip and his men, when
brought to the point of starvation, managed to escape in the night, crossed
the bay and fled to the country of the Nipmucks, in Central Massa-
clmsetts. Here the king and his warriors became the heralds of a general
war. The slumbering hatred of the savages was easily kindled into open
hostility. For a whole year the scattered settlements of the frontier be-
came a scene of burning, massacre and desolation.
After Philip's flight from Tiverton, the English forces marched
into the country of the Narragansetts. Here the women and children of
the Wampanoags had been received and sheltered. The wavering Canon-
chet was given his choice of peace or war. He cowered before the Eng-
lish muskets and signed a treaty, agreeing that his nation should observe
neutrality and deliver up all fugitives from the hostile tri])c. Still, it
was only a question of time when the Narragansetts would break their
covenant and espouse the cause of Philip.
The war was now transferred to the Connecticut valley. It had
been hoped that the Nipmucks would remain loyal to the English ; but
the influence of the exiled chieftain prevailed with them to take up arms.
As usual with savages, treachery was added to hos-
tility. Cajjtains Wheeler and Hutchinson, with a
company of twenty men, were sent to Brookfield to
hold a conference with ambassadors from the Nip-
muck nation. Instead of preparing for the council,
the Indians laid an ambush near the village, and
when the English were well surrounded, fired upon
them, killing nearly the whole company. A few
survivors, escajiing to the settlement, gave the alarm,
and the people fled to their block-house just in
time to save their lives.
For two days the place was assailed with every
missile that savage ingenuity could invent. Finally,
the house was fired with burning arrows, and the
destruction of all seemed certain ; but just as the roof
began to blaze, the friendly clouds poured down a shower of rain, and
the flames were extinguished. Then came reinforcements from Spring-
field, and the Indians fled. The people of Brookfield now abandoned
their homes and sought refuge in the towns along the river. On the
26th of August, a battle was fought in the outskirts of Deerfield. The
whites were successful ; but a few days afterward the savages succeeded
in firing the village, and the greater part of it was burned to the ground.
A storehouse containing the recently-gathered harvests -was saved, and
SECOND SCENK OF
KING PHILIP'S WAK.
142 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Captain I^atlirop, with a company of eighty picked men, undertook the
dangerous task of removing tlie stores to Hadley. A. train of wagons,
loaded with wheat and corn and guarded by the soldiers, left Deerlield on
the 18th of September, and had proceeded five miles, when they were
suddenly surrounded by eight hundred Indians who lay in anibusli at
the ford of a small creek. The whites fought desperately, and were
killed almost to a man. Meanwhile, Captain Mosely, at the liead of
seventy militia, arrived, and the battle continued, the English retreating
until they were reinforced by a band of a hundred and sixty English and
Mohegans. The savages were then beaten back with heavy losses. The
little stream where this fatal engagement occurred, was henceforth called
Bloody Brook.
On the same day of the burning of Deerfield, Hadley was attacked
while the people were at church. Everything was in confusion, and the
barbarians had already begun their work of butchery, when the gray-
haired General Goffe, who was concealed in the village, rushed forth from
his covert, and by rallying and directing the flying people saved them
from destruction. After the Indians had been driven into the woods, the
aged veteran went back to his hiding-place, and was seen no more. Late
in the autumn, a battle was fought at Springfield ; the town was assaulted
and most of the dwellings burned. Another attack was made on Hadley,
and a large part of the village was left in ashes. Hatfield was the next
object of savage vengeance ; but here the English were found prepared,
and the Indians were repulsed with heavy losses. The farms and the
weaker settlements were now abandoned, and the people sought shelter in
the stronger towms near the river.
Philip, finding that he could do no further harm on the northern
frontier, gathered his warriors together and repaired to the Narragansetts.
By receiving them, Canonchet openly violated his treaty with the Eng-
lish, but to refuse them was contrary to the savage virtues of his race.
To share the dubious fate of Pliilip was preferred to the longer con-
tinuance of a hateful alliance with foreigners. The authorities of Massa-
chusetts immediately declared war against the Narragaasett nation, and
Rhode Island was invaded by a thousand men under command of Colonel
Josiah Winslow. It was the determination to crush the Wam})anoags
and the Narragansetts at one blow ; the manner of defence adopted by
the savages favored such an undertaking. In the middle of an immense
cedar swamp, a short distance south-west of Kingston, in the countA* of
Washington, the Indians collected to the number of three thousand.
Into this place was gathered the whole wealth of the Narragansett nation.
A village of wigwams extended over several acres of land that rose out
3IASSACHUSETTS.—KING PHILIP'S WAR.
143
of the surrounding morasses. A fort was built on the island, and fortified
with a palisade and a breastwork of felled timber. Here the savages be-
lieved themselves secure from assault. The English regiment arrived at
the swamp at daybreak on the 19th of December, and struggling through
the bogs, reached the fort at noonday. The attack was made imme-
diately. The only entrance to the camp was by means of a fallen tree
that lay from an opening in the palisade to the opposite bank of a pond.
Over this hazardous passage a brave
few sprang forward, but were in-
stantly swept off by the fire of the
Indians. Another company, made
cautious by the fate of their com-
rades, crept around the defences, un-
til, finding a point unguarded, they
charged straight into the enclosure.
The work of death and destruction
now began in earnest. The wigwams
THIKD SCENE OF KING PHILIP'S WAR.
were set on fire, and the kindling
flames swept around the village. The yells of the combatants mingled
with the roar of the conflagration. But the superior discipline and
valor of the whites soon decided the battle. The Indians, attempting
to escape from the burning fort, ran everywhere upon the loaded muskets
of the English. A thousand warriors were killed and hundreds more
were captured. Nearly all the wounded perished in the flames. There,
too, the old men, the women and babes of the nation met the horrors
of death by fire. The pride of the Narragansetts had perished in a day.
But the victory was dearly purchased ; eighty English soldiers, including
six captains of the regiment, were killed, and a hundred and fifty others
were wounded.
A few of the savages, breaking through the English lines, escaped.
Led by Philip, they again repaired to the Nipmucks, and with the open-
ing of spring the war was renewed with more violence than ever. As
their fortunes declined the Indians grew desperate; they had nothing
more to lose. Around three hundred miles of frontier, extending from
Maine to the mouth of the Connecticut, there was massacre and devasta-
tion. Lancaster, Medfield, Groton and Marlborough were laid in ashes.
Weymouth, within twenty miles of Boston, met the same fate. Every-
where were seen the traces of rapine and murder.
But the end was near at hand. The resources of the savages were
■wasted, and their numbers grew daily less. In April, Canonchet was
overtaken and captured on the banks of the Blackstone. He was offered
144 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
his life if he would procure a treaty of peace ; but the haughty chieftain
rejected the proposal with disdain, and was put to death. Philip was still
at large, but his company had dwindled to a handful. In the early sum-
mer, his wife and son were made prisoners ; the latter was sold as a slave,
and ended his life under the lash of a taskmaster in the Bermudas. The
savage monarch was heartbroken now, and cared no longer for his life.
Repairing secretly to his old home at Mount Hope, his place of conceal-
ment M'as revealed to the whites. A company of soldiers was sent to sur-
round him. A treacherous Indian guided the party to the spot, and then
himself, stealing nearer, took a deadly aim at the breast of his chieftain.
The report of a musket rang through the forest, and the j)ainted king
of the Wampanoags sprang forward and fell dead.
New England suffered terribly in this M-ar. The expenses and
losses of the war amounted to fiilly five hundred thousand dollars.
Thirteen towns and six hundred dwellings lay smouldering in ashes.
Almost every family had heard the war-whoop of the savages. Six
hundred men, the flower and pride of the country, had fallen in the field.
Hundreds of families had been butchered in cold blood. Gray-haired
sire, mother and babe had sunk together under the vengeful blow of the
red man's gory tomahawk. Now there was peace again. The Indiaa
race was swept out of New England. The tribes beyond the Connecticut
came humbly submissive, and pleaded for their lives. The colonists re-
turned to their desolated farms and villages to build new homes in the
ashes of old ruins.
The echo of King Philip's war had hardly died away before the
country was involved in troubles of a different sort. It had been ex-
pected that the English government would do something to repair the
hea\"y losses which the colonists had sustained ; but not so. Instead of
hel}) came Edward Randolph, a royal emissary, with authority to collect
duties and abridge colonial liberties. Governor Leverett received him
coldly, and told him in plain w^ords that not even the king could right-
fully restrict the freedom of his American subjects; that the people of the
colonies had finished the Indian war without a cent of expense to the
English treasury, and that they were now fairly entitled to the enjoyment
of their chartered rights. After a six M^eeks' sojourn at Boston, Randolph
Bailed back to London, bearing to the ministry an exaggerated account
of colonial arrogance. The king was already scheming to revoke all the
New England charters ; Randolph's reception furnished a further pretext
for such a course of action.
The next trouble M-as concerning the jurisdiction of Maine. Sir
Ferdinand Gorges, the old proprietor of that province, was now dead;
MASSACHUSETTS.— KING PHILIP'S WAR. 145
but his heirs had never relinquished their claims to the territory. The
people of Maine iiad meanwhile put themselves under the authority of
Massachusetts ; but the representatives of Gorges carried the matter before
the privy council, and in 1677 a decision was rendered in their favor.
Thereupon the Boston government made a proposition to the Gorges
family to purchase their claims ; the proposition was accepted, and on the
6th of May the heirs signed a deed by which, in consideration of twelve
hundred and fifty pounds sterling, the soil and jurisdiction of the province
were transferred to Massachusetts.
A similar difficulty arose in regard to New Hampshire. As far
back as 1622 the Plymouth council had granted this territory to two of
their own number — Gorges, just mentioned, and Captain John Mason.
Seven years after the grant was made, Gorges surrendered his claim to
Mason, who thus became sole proprietor. But this territory was also
covered by the charter of Massachusetts. Mason died ; and now, in 1679,
his son Robert came forward and claimed the province. This cause was
also taken before the ministers, who decided that the title of the younger
Mason was valid. To the great disappointment of the people of both
provinces, the two governments were arbitrarily separated. The king's
policy was now made manifest. A royal government, the first in Ncav
England, was immediately established over New Hampshire; Mai^on
nominated Edward Cranfield as governor, the king confirmed the ap-
pointment, and received in return one-fifth of all the rents.
But the people took care that the rents should not amount to much.
They refused to recognize Cranfield's commission, and thwarted his plans
in every way possible. Being in despair, he wrote to the English govern-
ment that he would esteem it the greatest happiness to return home and
leave the unreasonable people of New Hampshire to themselves. The
king attributed all this trouble to the influence of Massachusetts. He
could not forget how that commonwealth had treated his custom-house
officer Randolph. The hostility of the English government to the exist-
ing order of things in New England became more bitter than ever. To
carry out his plan of subverting the colonial governments, the king
directed his judges to make an inquiry as to whether Massachusetts had
not forfeited her charter. The proceedings were protracted until tlie
summer of 1684, when the royal court gave a decision in accordance with
the monarch's wishes. The patent was forfeited, said the judges; and
the English crown might justly assume entire control of the colony. The
plan of the king was thus on the point of realization, but the shadow of
death was already at his door. On the 6th of February, 1685, his evil
reign of twenty-five years ended with his life.
10
146 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The new sovereign, James II., immediately adopted Ms brother's
colonial policy. In the next year after his accession, the scheme so long
entertained was successfully carried out. The charter of Massachusetts
was formally revoked ; all the colonies between Nova Scotia and Narra-
gansett Bay were consolidated, and Joseph Dudley appointed president.
New England was not prepared for open resistance ; the colonial assembly
was dissolved by its own act, and the members returned sullenly to their
homes. In the winter following, Dudley was superseded by Sir Edmund
Andros, who had been appointed royal governor of all New England.
His commission ought to have been entitled An Article for the
Destructiox of Colonial Liberty. If James II. had searched his
kingdom, he could hardly have found a tool better fitted to do his will.
The scarlet-coated despot landed at Boston on the 20th of December, and
at once began the work of demolishing the cherished institutions of the
people. Randolph was made chief secretary and censor of the press;
nothing might be printed without his sanction. Popular representation
was abolished. Voting by ballot was prohibited. Town meetings were
forbidden. The Church of England was openly encouraged. The public
schools were allowed to go to ruin. Men were arrested without warrant
of law ; and when as prisoners they arose in court to plead the privileges
of the great English charter which had stood unquestioned for four hun-
dred and fifty years, they were told that the Great Charter was not made
for the perverse people of America. Dudley, who had been continued in
office as chief-justice, was in the habit of saying to his packed juries, at
the close of each trial : " Now, worthy gentlemen, we expect a good ver-
dict from you to-day ;" and the verdicts were rendered accordingly.
Thus did Massachusetts Jose her liberty; and Plymouth fared no
better. If the stronger colony fell prostrate, what could the weaker do ?
The despotism of Andros was quickly extended from Cape Cod Bay to
the Piscataqua. New Hampshire was next invaded and her civil rights
completely overthrown. Rhode Island suffered the same calamity. In
May of 1686 her charter was taken away with a writ, and her constitu-
tional rights subverted. Some of the colonists brought forward Indian
deeds for their lands ; the royal judges replied, with a sneer, that the sig-
nature of Massasoit was not worth as much as the scratch of a bear's paw.
The seal of Rhode Island was broken, and an irresponsible council ap-
pointed to conduct the government. Attended by an armed guard, Andros
proceeded to Connecticut. Arriving at Hartford in October of 1687, he
found the assembly of the province in session, and demanded the surren-
der of the colonial charter. The instrument wa.s brought in and laid upon
the table. A spirited debate ensued, and coutiaued until evening. When
MASSACHUSETTS.— WAR AND WITCHCRAFT. 147
it was about to be decided that the charter should be given up, the lamps
were suddenly dashed out. Other lights were brought in ; but the char-
ter had disappeared. Joseph Wadsworth, snatching up the precious
parchment, bore it off through the darkness and concealed it in a hollow
tree, ever afterward remembered with affection as The Charter Oak.
But the assembly was overawed and the free government of Connecticut
subverted. Thus was the authority of Andros established throughout
the country. The people gave vent to their feelings by calling him The
Tyrajstt of New England.
But his dominion ended suddenly. The English Revolution of
1688 was at hand. James II. was driven from his throne and kingdom.
The entire system of arbitrary rule which that monarch had established
fell with a crash, and Andros with the rest. The news of the revolution
and of the accession of William and Mary reached Boston on the 4th of
April, 1689. A few days afterward, the governor had occasion to write
a note to his colonel of militia, telling him to keep the soldiers under
arms, as there was "a general buzzing among the people." On the 18th
of the month, the citizens of Charlestown and Boston rose in open rebel-
lion. Andros and his minions, attempting to escape, were seized and
marched to prison. The insurrection spread through the country; and
before the 10th of May every colony in New England had restored its
former liberties.
CHAPTER 'XVI.
MASSACHUSETTS— WAR AND WITCHCRAFT.
IN 1689, war was declared between France and England. This con-
flict, known in American history as King William's War, grew
out of the English Revolution of the preceding year. When James II.
escaped from his kingdom, he found refuge at the court of Louis XIV.
of France. The two monarchs were both Catholics, and both held the
same despotic theory of government. On this account, and from other
considerations, an alliance was made between them, by the terms of which
Louis agreed to support James in his effort to recover the English throne.
Parliament, meanwhile, had settled the crown on William of Orange.
By these means the new sovereign was brought into conflict not only
with the exiled James, but also with his confederate, the king of France.
148 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The war which thus originated in Europe soon extended to the American
colonies of the two nations ; New England and New France entered the
conflict under the flags of their respective countries.
The struggle began on the north-eastern frontier of New Hamp-
shire. On the 27th of June, a party of Indians in alliance with the
French made an attack on Dover. The venerable magistrate of the
town, Richard Waldron, now eighty years of age, was inhumanly mur-
dered. Twenty-three others were killed, and twenty-nine dragged ofi"
captive into the wilderness.
In August a war-party of a hundred Abenakis embarked in a fleet
of canoes, floated out of the mouth of the Penobscot, and steered down
the coast to Pemaquid, now Bremen. The inhabitants ^yere taken by
surprise ; a company of farmers were surrounded in the harvest-field and
murdered. The fort was besieged for two days and compelled to sur-
render. A few of the people escaped into the woods, but the greater
number were killed or carried away captive. A month later an alliance
was effected between the English and the powerful Mohawks west of the
Hudson ; but the Indians refused to make war upon their countrymen of
Maine. The Dutch settlements of New Netherlaud, having now passed
under the dominion of England, made common cause against the French.
In January of 1690 a regiment of French and Indians left Montreal
and directed their march to the south. Crossing the Mohawk River, they
arrived on the 8th of February at the village of Schenectady. Lying
concealed in the forest until midnight, they stole through the unguarded
gates, raised the war-whoop and began the work of death. The town was
soon in flames. Sixty people were killed and scalped ; the rest, escaping
iialf clad into the darkness, ran sixteen miles through the snow to Albany.
The settlement of Salmon Falls, on the Piscataqua, was next attacked and
destroyed by a war-party led by the Frenchman Hertel. Joining another
company from Quebec, under command of Portneuf, the savages pro-
ceeded against the colony at Casco Bay. The English fort at that place
was taken and the settlements broken up. Thus far the fortunes of the
war had been wholly on the side of the French and their allies.
But New England was now thoroughly aroused. In order to pro-
vide the ways and means of war, a colonial congress was convened at New
York. Here it was resolved to attempt the conquest of Canada by march-
ing an army by way of Lake Champlain against Montreal. At the same
time, Massachusetts was to co-operate with the land forces by sending a
fl^et by way of the St. Lawrence for the reduction of Quebec. Thirfry^-
four vessels, carrying two thousand troops, were accordingly fitted out, and
the command given to Sir William Pliipps. Proceeding first against Port
MASSACHUSETTS.— WAR AND WITCHCRAFT. 149
Royal, he compelled a surrender ; the whole of Nova Scotia submitted
Avithout a struggle. If the commander had sailed at once against Quebec,
that place too would have been forced to capitulate ; but vexatious delays
retarded the expedition until the middle of October. Meanwhile, an
Abenaki Indian had carried the news of the coming armament to Fronte-
nac, governor of Canada ; and when the fleet came in sight of the town,
the castle of St. Louis was so well garrisoned and provisioned as to bid
defiance to the English forces. The opportunity was lost, and it only
remained for Phipps to sail back to Boston. To meet the expenses of
this unfortunate expedition, Massachusetts was obliged to issue bills of
credit which were made a legal tender in the payment of debt. Such
was the origin of paper money in America.
Meanwhile, the land forces had proceeded from Albany as far as
Lake Champlain. Here dissensions arose among the commanders.
Colonel Leisler of New York charged Winthrop of Connecticut with
treachery; and the charge was returned that Leisler's commissary had
furnished no supplies for the Connecticut soldiers. The quarrel became
so violent that the expedition had to be abandoned, and the troops
marched gloomily homeward. The great campaign had resulted in com-
plete humiliation.
Sir William Phipps had as little success in civil matters as in the
command of a fleet. Shortly after his return from Quebec he was sent as
ambassador to England. The objects of his mission were, in the first
place, to procure aid from the English government in the further prose-
cution of the war ; and secondly, to secure, if possible, a reissue of the old
colonial charter. To the first of these requests the ministers replied that
the armies and navies of England could not be spared to take part in
a petty Indian war ; and the second was met with coldness and refusal.
King William was secretly opposed to the liberal provisions of the former
charter, and looked with disfavor on the project of renewing it. It is
even doubtful whether Phipps himself desired the restoration of the old
patent; for when he returned to Boston in the spring of 1692, he bore a
new instrument from the king, and a commission as royal governor of the
province. By the terms of this new constitution, Plymouth, Maine and
Nova Scotia were consolidated with Massachusetts; while New Hami>-
shire, against the protests and petitions of her people, was forcibly sepa-
rated from the mother colony.
The war still continued, but without decisive results. In 1694, the
village of Oyster River, now Durham, was destroyed by a band of savages
led by the French captain Villieu. The inhabitants, to the number of
ninety-four, were either killed or carried into captivity. Two years later
150 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the English fortress at Pemaquid was a second time surrendered to the
French and Indians, under command of Baron Castin. The captives
were sent to Boston and exchanged for prisoners in the hands of the
English. In the following March, the town of Haverhill, on the Merri-
mac, was captured under circumstances of special atrocity. Nearly forty
persons were butchered in cold blood ; only a few were spared for cap- .
tivity. Among the latter was Mrs. Hannah Dustin. Her child, only
a week old, was snatched out of her arms and dashed against a tree. The
heartbroken mother, with her nurse and a lad named Leonardson, from
Worcester, was taken by the savages to an island in the Merrimac, a short
distance above Concord. Here, while their captors, twelve in number,
were asleep at night, the three prisoners arose, silently armed themselves
with tomahawks, and with one deadly blow after another crushed in the
temples of the sleeping savages, until ten of them lay still in death;
then, embarking in a canoe, the captives dropped doAvn the river and
reached the English settlement in safety. Mrs. Dustin carried home with
her the gun and tomahawk of the savage who had destroyed her family,
and a bag containing the scalps of her neighbors. It is not often that the
mother of a murdered babe has found such ample vengeance.
But the war was already at an end. Early in 1697, commissioners
of France and England assembled at the town of Ryswick, in Holland ;
and on the 10th of the following September, a treaty of peace was con-
cluded. King William was acknowledged as the rightful sovereign of
England, and the colonial boundary-lines of the two nations in America
were established as before.
Massachusetts had in the mean time been visited with a worse
calamity than war. The darkest page in the history of New England is
that wliich bears the record of the Salem Witchcraft. The same
town which fifty-seven years previously had cast out Roger Williams was
now to become the scene of the most fatal delusion of modern times. In
February of 1692, in that part of Salem afterward called Dan vers, a
daughter and a niece of Samuel Parris, tlie minister, were attacked Avith
a nervous disorder which rendered them partially insane. Parris be-
lieved, or affected to believe, that the two girls were bewitched, and that
Tituba, an Indian maid-servant of the household, was the author of the
affliction. He had seen her performing some of the rude ceremonies of
her own religion, and this gave color to his suspicions. He tied Tituba,
and whipped the ignorant creature until, at his own dictation, she con-
fessed herself a witch. Here, no doubt, the matter would have ended
had not other causes existed for the continuance and spread of the miser-
able delusion.
MASSACHUSETTS.— WAR AND WITCHCRAFT. 151
But Parris had had a quarrel in his church. A part of the congre-
gation desired that George Burroughs, a former minister, should be rein-
stated, to the exclusion of Parris. Burroughs still lived at Salem ; and
there was great animosity between the partisans of the former and the
present pastor. Burroughs disbelieved in witchcraft, and openly ex-
pressed his contempt of the system. Here, then, Parris found an oppor-
tunity to turn the confessions of the foolish Indian servant against his
enemies, to overwhelm his rival with the superstitions of the community,
and perhaps to have him put to death. There is no doubt whatever that
the whole murderous scheme originated in the personal malice of Parris.
But there w^ere others ready to aid him. First among these was
the celebrated Cotton Mather, minister of Boston. He, being in high re-
pute for wisdom, had recently preached much on the subject of witchcraft,
teaching the people that witches w^ere dangerous and ought to be put to
death. He thus became the natural confederate of Parris, and the chief
author of the terrible scenes that ensued. Sir William Phipps, the royal
governor, who had just arrived from England, was a member of Mather's
church. Increase Mather, the father of Cotton, had nominated Phipps to
his present office. Stoughton, the deputy-governor, who was appointed
judge and presided at the trials of the witches, was the tool of Parris and
the two Mathers. To these men, more especially to Parris and Mather,
must be charged the full infamy of what followed.
By the laws of England witchcraft was punishable with death.
The code of Massachusetts was the same as that of the mother-country.
In the early history of the colony, one person charged wdth being a
wizard had been arrested at Charlestown, convicted and executed. But
with the progress and enlightenment of the people, many had grown bold
enough to denounce and despise the baleful superstition. Something,
therefore, had to be done to save the tottering fabric of witchcraft from
falling into contempt. A special court was accordingly appointed by
Governor Phipps to go to Salem and to sit in judgment on the persons
accused by Parris. Stoughton was the presiding judge, Parris himself
the prosecutor, and Cotton Mather a kind of bishop to decide when the
testimony was sufficient to condemn.
On the 21st of March, the horrible proceedings began. Mary Cory
was arrested, not indeed for being a witch, but for denying the reality of
witchcraft. When brought before the church and court, she denied all
guilt, but was convicted and hurried to prison. Sarah Cloyce and
Rebecca Nurse, two sisters of the most exemplary lives, were next appre-
hended as witches. The only witnesses against them were Tituba, her half-
witted Indian husband and the simple girl Abigail Williams, the niece
152 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of Parris. The victims were sent to prison, protesting their innocence.
Giles Cory, a patriarch of eighty years, was next seized ; he also was one
of those who had opposed Parris. The Indian accuser fell down before
Edward Bishop, pretending to be in a fit under satanic influence; the
sturdy farmer cured him instantly with a sound flogging, and said that
lie could restore the rest of the afflicted in the same manner. He and his
Avife were immediately arrested and condemned. George Burroughs, the
rival of Parris, was accused and hurried to prison. And so the work
went on, until seventy-five innocent people were locked up in dungeons.
Not a solitary partisan of Parris or Mather had been arrested.
In the hope of saving their lives, some of the terrified prisoners
now began to confess themselves witches, or bewitched. It was soon
found that a confession was almost certain to procure liberation. It be-
came evident that the accused were to be put to death, not for being
witches or wizards, but for denying the reality of witchcraft. The special
court was already in session ; convictions followed fast ; the gallows stood
waiting for its victims. The truth of Mather's preaching was to be estab-
lished by hanging whoever denied it ; and Parris was to save his pastorate
by murdering his rival. When the noble Burroughs mounted the scaffold,
he stood composedly and repeated correctly the test-prayer which it wa*
said no wizard could utter. The people broke into sobs and moans, and
would have rescued their friend from death ; but the tyrant Mather dashed
among them on horseback, muttering imprecations, and drove the hang-
man to his horrid work. Old Giles Cory, seeing" that conviction was cer-
tain, refused to plead, and ivas pressed to death. Five women were hanged
in one day. Between the 10th of June and the 22d of September, twenty
victims were hurried to their doom. Fifty-five others had been tortured
into the confession of abominable falsehoods. A hundred and fifty lay in
prison awaiting their fate. Two hundred were accused or suspected, and
ruin seemed to impend over New England. But a reaction at last set in
among the people. Notwithstanding the vociferous clamor and denuncia-
tions of Mather, the witch tribunals were overthrown. The representative
assembly convened early in October, and the hated court which Phipps
had appointed to sit at Salem was at once dismissed. The spell was dis-
solved. The thralldom of the popular mind was broken. Reason shook
off" the terror that had oppressed it. The prison doors were opened, and
the victims of malice and supei'stition went forth free. In the beginning
of the next year a few persons charged with witchcraft were again
arraigned and brought before the courts. Some were even convicted, but
the conviction went for nothing ; not another life was sacrificed to passion
and fanaticism.
MASSACHUSETTS.— WARS OF ANNE AND GEORGE. 153
Most of those who had participated in the terrible deeds of the
preceding summer confessed the great wrong which they had done ; but
confessions could not restore the dead. The bigoted Mather, in a vain
attempt to justify himself before the world, wrote a treatise in which he
expressed his great thankfulness that so many witches had met their just
doom. It is not the least humiliating circumstance of this sad business
that Mather's hypocritical and impudent book received the approbation
of the president of Harvard College. In all this there is to the American
student one consoling reflection — the pages of his country's history will
never again be blotted with so dark a stain.
CHAPTER XVII.
MASSACHUSETTS.— WARS OF ANNE AND GEORGE.
THE peace which followed the treaty of Ryswick was of short dura-
tion. Within less than four years France and England were again
involved in a conflict which, beginning in Europe, soon extended to the
American colonies. In the year 1700, Charles II., king of Spain, died,
having named as his successor Philip of Anjou, a grandson of Louis
XIV. This measure pointed clearly to a union of the crowns of France
and Spain. The jealousy of all Europe was aroused; a league was
formed between England, Holland and Austria; the archduke Charles
of the latter country was put forward by the allied powers as a candidate
for the Spanish throne; and war was declared against Louis XIV. for
suj)porting the claims of Philip.
England had against France another cause of offence. In Septem-
ber of 1701, James II., the exiled king of Great Britain, died at the court
of Louis, who now, in violation of the treaty of Ryswick, recognized the
son of James as the rightful sovereign of England. This action was re-
garded as an open insult to English nationality. King William led his
armies to the field not less to thwart the ambition of France than to save
his own crown and kingdom. But the English monarch did not live to
carry out his plans. While yet the war was hardly begun, the king fell
from his horse, was attacked with fever, and died in May of 1702.
Parliament had already settled the crown on Anne, the sister-in-law
of William and daughter of James II. The new sovereign adopted the
154 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
policy of her predecessor. From the circumstance of her reign, the con^
flict with France, which lasted for nearly thirteen years, is known in his-
tory as Queen Anne's War; but a better name is The War of the
Spanish Succession.
In America the field of operations was limited to New England
and South Carolina. The central colonies were scarcely aw^are that war
existed. The military operations of both parties were conducted in a
feeble and desultory manner. The more influential Indian tribes held
aloof from the struggle. In August, 1701, the powerful Five Nations,
whose dominions south of Lake Ontario and the river St. Lawrence formed
a barrier between Canada and New York, made a treaty of neutrality
with both the French and the English. The Abenakis of Maine did the
same; but the French Jesuits prevailed with the latter to break their
compact. The first notice of treachery which the English had, was a
fearful massacre. In one day the whole country between the town of
Wells and the Bay of Casco was given up to burning and butchery.
In midwinter of 1703-4 the town of Deerfield was destroyed. A
war-party of three hundred French and Indians, setting out from Canada,
marched on the snow-crust into the Connecticut valley. On the last
night of February, the savages lay in the pine forest that surrounded tiie
ill-fated village. Just before daybreak they rushed from their covert and
fired the houses. Forty-seven of the inhabitants were tomahawked. A
hundred and twelve were dragged into captivity. The prisoners, many
of them women and children, were obliged to marcli to Canada. The
snow lay four feet deep. The poor wretches, haggard with fear and
starvation, sank down and died. The deadly hatchet hung ever above
the heads of the feeble and the sick. Eunice Williams, the minister's
M'ife, fainted by the wayside ; in the presence of her husband and five
captive children, her brains were dashed out with a tomahawk. Those
who survived to the end of the journey were afterward ransomed and
permitted to return to their desolated homes. A daughter of Mr. Wil-
liams remained with the savages, grew up among the jNIohawks, married
a chieftain, and in after years returned in Indian garb to Deerfield. No
entreaties could induce her to remain with her friends. The solitude of
the woods and the society of her tawny husband had prevailed over the
charms of civilization.
In Maine and New Hampshire the war was marked with similar
barbarities. Farms were devastated ; towns were burned ; the inhabitants
were murdered or carried to Canada. Prowling bands of savages, led on
by French officers, penetrated at times into the heart of Massachusetts.
Against the treacherous barbarians and their bloodthii-sty leaders there
MASSACHUSETTS.— WARS OF ANNE AND GEORGE. 155
was no security either at home or abroad. Along the desolated frontier
ruin prevailed, as in the days of King Philip.
In 1707, the reduction of Port Royal was undertaken by Massa-
chusetts. A fleet, bearing a thousand soldiers, was equipped and sent
against the town. But Baron Castin, who commanded the French garri-
son, conducted the defence with so much skill that the English were
obliged to abandon the undertaking. From this costly and disastrous
'expedition Massachusetts gained nothing but discouragement and debt.
Nevertheless, after two years of preparation, the enterprise was renewed ;
and in 1710 an English and American fleet of thirty-six vessels, having
on board four regiments of troops, anchored before Port Royal. The
garrison was weak; Subercase, the French commander, had neither
talents nor courage ; famine came ; and after a feeble defence of eleven
days, the place surrendered at discretion. By this conquest all of Nova
Scotia passed under the dominion of the English. The flag of Great
Britain was hoisted over the conquered fortress, and the name of Port
Royal gave place to Annapolis, in honor of Queen Anne.
Vast preparations were now made for the invasion of Canada. A
land force under command of General Nicholson was to march against
Montreal, while Quebec, the key to the French dominions in America,
was to be reduced by an English fleet. For this purpose fifteen men-of-
war and forty transports were placed under command of Sir Hovenden
Walker. Seven regiments of veterans, selected from the armies of Europe,
were added to the colonial forces and sent with the expedition. Before
such an armament the defences of Quebec could hardly hold out an hour.
But for the utter incompetency of the admiral, success would have been
assured.
For six weeks in midsummer the great fleet lay idly in Boston Har-
bor. Sir Hovenden was getting ready to sail. The Abenaki Indians
carried the news leisurely to Quebec ; and every day added to the strength
of the ramparts. At last, on the 30th of July, when no further excuse
could be invented, the ships set sail for the St. Lawrence. At the Bay
of Gasp6 the admiral thought it necessary to loiter a while; then he
busied himself with devising a plan to save his ships from the ice during
the next winter. Proceeding slowly up the St. Lawrence, the fleet, on
the 22d of August, was enveloped in a thick fog. The wind blew hard
from the east. The commander was cautioned to remain on deck, but
went quietly to bed. A messenger aroused liim just in time to see eight
of his best vessels dashed to pieces on the rocks. Eight hundred and
eighty-four men ■went down in the foaming whirlpools. A council of war
^^as held, and all voted that it was impossible to proceed. In a letter to
156 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the English government, Walker expressed great gratitude that by the
loss of a thousand men the rest had been saved frovi freezing to death at
Quebec. The fleet sailed back to England, and the colonial troops were
disbanded at Boston.
Meanwhile, the army of General Nicholson had marched against
Montreal, But when news arrived of the failure of the fleet, the land
expedition was also abandoned. The dallying cowardice of \Yalker had
brought the campaign of 1711 to a shameful end. France had already
made overtures for peace. Negotiations were formally begun in the early
part of 1712; and on the 11th of April in the following year a treaty
was concluded at Utrecht, a town of Holland. By the terms of the settle-
ment, England obtained control of the fisheries of Newfoundland. Labra-
dor, the Bay of Hudson and the whole of Acadia, or Nova Scotia, were
ceded to Great Britain. On the 13th of July the chiefs of the hostile
Indian tribes met the ambassadors of New England at Portsmouth, and a
second treaty was concluded, by which peace was secured throughout the
American colonies.
For thirty-one years after the close of Queen Anne's war, Massa-
chusetts was free from hostile invasion. This was not, however, a period
of public tranquillity. The people were dissatisfied with the royal govern-
ment which King William had established, and were at constant variance
with their governors. Phipps and his administration had been heartily
disliked. Governor SImte was equally unpopular. Burnett, who suc-
ceeded him, and Belcher afterward, were only tolerated becaxise they
could not be shaken off. The opposition to the royal officers took the
form of a controversy about their salaries. The general assembly in-
sisted that the governor and his councilors should be paid in proportion
to the importance of their several offices, and for actual service only.
But the royal commissions gave to each officer a fixed salar)", which was
fi'equently out of all proportion to the services required. After many
years of antagonism, the difficulty was finally adjusted with a compromise
in which the advantage was wholly on the side of the people. It was
agreed that the salaries of the governor and his assistants sliould be an-
nually allowed, and the amount fixed by vote of the assembly. The
representatives of popular liberty had once more triumjihed over the
principles of arbitrary rule.
On the death of Charles YI. of Austria, in 1740, there were
two principal claimants to the crown of the empire — Maria Theresa,
daughter of the late emperor, and Charles Albert of Bavaria. Each
claimant had his party and his army ; war followed ; and nearly all the
nations of Europe were swept into the conflict. As usually happened in
MASSACHUSETTS.— WARS OF ANNE AND GEORGE. 157
such struggles, England and France were arrayed against each other.
The contest that ensued is generally known as the War of the Austrian
Succession, but in American history is called King George's Wae;
for George II. was now king of England.
In America the only important event of the war was the capture
of Louisburg, on Cape Breton Island. This place had been fortified at
vast expense by the French. Standing at the principal entrance to the
gulf and river of St. Lawrence, the fortress was regarded as a key to the
Canadian provinces. Now England was quick to note that both New-
foundland and Nova Scotia were threatened so long as the French flag
floated over Louisburg. Governor Shirley brought the matter before the
legislature of Massachusetts, and it was resolved to attempt the capture
of the enemy's stronghold.
The other colonies were invited to aid the enterprise. Connecticut
responded by sending more than five hundred troops ; New Hampshire
and Rhode Island each furnished three hundred; a park of artillery
was sent from New York; and Pennsylvania contributed a supply of
provisions. The forces of Massachusetts alone numbered more than three
thousand. It only remained to secure the co-operation of the English
fleet then cruising in the West Indies. An earnest invitation was sent to
Commodore Warren to join his armament with the colonial forces ; but
having no orders, he declined the request. Everything devolved on the
army and navy of New England, but there was no quailing under the
responsibility. William Pepperell, of Maine, w^as appointed commander-
in-chief; and on the 4th of April, 1745, the fleet sailed for Cape Breton.
At Canseau, the eastern cape of Nova Scotia, the expedition was
detained for sixteen days. The sea was thick with ice-drifts floating
from the north. But the delay was fortunate, for in the mean time Com-
modore Warren had received instructions from England to proceed to
Massachusetts and aid Governor Shirley in the contemplated reduction
of Cape Breton. Sailing to the north, Warren brought his fleet safely to
Canseau on the 23d of April. On the last day of the month the arma-
ment, now numbering a hundred vessels, entered the Bay of Gabarus in
sight of Louisburg. A landing was effected four miles below the city.
On the next day a company of four hundred volunteers, led by William
Vaughan, marched across the peninsula and attacked a French battery
which had been planted on the shore two miles beyond the town. The
French, struck with terror at the impetuosity of the unexpected charge,
spiked their guns and fled. Before morning the cannons were re-drilled
and turned upon the fortress. An English battery was established on
the east side of the harbor, but the sea-walls of Louisburg were so strong
158
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
that little damage was done by the guns across the bay. An artack in
the rear of the town seemed impossible on account of a large swamp
which lay in that direction ; but the resolute soldiers of New England
lashed their heavy guns upon sledges, and dragged them through the
marsh to a tract of solid ground within two hundred yards of the enemy's
bastions. Notwithstanding the advantage of this position, the walls of
the fort stood firm, and the siege progressed slowly.
On the 18th of May a French ship of sixty-four guns, laden with
stores for the garrison, was captured by Warren's fleet. The French
were greatly discouraged by this event, and the defence grew feeble.
The English were correspondingly elated with the prospect of success.
On the 26th of the month an effort was made to capture the French bat-
tery in the harbor. A company of daring volunteers undertook the
hazardous enterprise by night. Embarking in boats, they drew near the
island where the battery was planted, but were discovered and repulsed
with the loss of a hundred and seventy-six men. It was now determined
to carry the town by storm. The assault M-as set for the 18th of June;
but on the day previous the desponding garrison sent out a flag of truce ;
terms of capitulation were proposed and accepted, and the English flag
rose above the conquered fortress.
By the terms of this surrender not only Louisburg, but the whole
of Cape Breton, was given up to England. The rejoicing at Boston and
throughout the colonies was only
equaled by the indignation and alarm
of the French government. Louis-
burg must be retaken at all hazards,
said the ministers of France. For
this purpose a powerful fleet, under
command of Duke d'Anville, was sent
out in the following year. Before
reaching America the duke died of a
pestilence. His successor went mad
and killed himself. Storms and ship-
wrecks and disasters drove the ill-
fated expedition to utter ruin. The renewal of the enterprise, in 1747,
was attended with like misfortune. Commodores Warren and Anson
overtook the French squadron and compelled a humiliating surrender.
In 1748, a treaty of peace was concluded at Aix-la-Chapelle, a
town of Western Germany. After eight years of devastating warfare,
nothing was gained but a mutual restoration of conquests. By the terms
of settlement. Cape .Breton was surrendered to France. With grief and
L^
^-i:»-i:s'Trs
SIEGE OF LOUISBURG, 1745.
MASSACHUSETTS.— WARS OF ANNE AND GEORGE. 159
ehame the fishermen and farmers of New England saw the island which
had been subdued by their valor restored to their enemies. Of all the
disputed boundary-lines between the French and English colonies in
America, not a single one was settled by this treaty. The European
nations had exhausted themselves with fighting ; what cared they for the
welfare of distant and feeble provinces ? The real war between France
and England for colonial supremacy in the West was yet to be fought.
Within six years after the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, the two great powers
were involved in the final and decisive conflict.
The history of Massachusetts has now been traced through a period
of a hundred and thirty years. A few words on the Character op
THE Puritans may be appropriately added. They were in the begin-
ning a vigorous and hardy people, firm-set in the principles of honesty
and the practices of virtue. They were sober, industrious, frugal ; reso-
lute, zealous and steadfast. They esteemed honor above preferment, and
truth more than riches. Loving home and native land, they left both
for the sake of freedom ; and finding freedom, they cherished it with the
zeal and devotion of martyrs. Without influence, they became influential ;
without encouragement, great. Despised and mocked and hated, they
rose above their revilers. In the school of evil fortune they gained the
discipline of patience. Suffering without cause brought resignation with-
out despair. Themselves the victims of persecution, they became the
founders of a colony — a commonwealth — a nation. They were the chil-
dren of adversity and the fathers of renown.
The gaze of the Puritan was turned ever to posterity. He believed
in the future. His affections and hopes were with the coming ages. For
his children he toiled and sacrificed ; for them the energies of his life were
cheerfully exhausted. The system of free schools is the enduring monu-
ment of his love and devotion. The printing-press is his memorial.
Almshouses and asylums are the tokens of his care for the unfortunate.
With him the outcast found sympathy, and the wanderer a home. He
was the earliest champion of civil rights, and the builder of the Union.
The fathers of New England have been accused of bigotry. The
charge is true : it is the background of the picture. In matters of re-
ligion they were intolerant and superstitious. Their religious faith was
gloomy and foreboding. Human life was deemed a sad and miserable
journey. To be mistaken was to sin. To fail in trifling ceremonies was
reckoned a grievous crime. In the shadow of such belief the people be-
came austere and melancholy. Escaping from the splendid formality of
the Episcopal Church, they set up a colder and severer form of worship;
and the form was made like iron. Dissenters themselves, they could not
160 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
tolerate the dissent of others. To restrain and punish error seemed
right and necessary. Williams and Hutchinson were banished; the
Quakers were persecuted and the witches hanged. But Puritanism
contained within itself the power to correct its own abuses. Within
the austere and gloomy fabric dwelt the very soul and genius of Free
Thought. Under the ice-bound rigors of the faith flowed a current
which no fatalism could congeal, no superstition poison. The heart
of a mighty, tumultuous, liberty-loving life throbbed within the cold,
stiif body of formalism. A powerful vitality, which no disaster could
subdue, no persecution quench, warmed and energized and quickened.
The tyranny of Phipps, the malice of Parris, and the bigotry of Mather
are far outweighed by the sacrifices of Winthrop, the beneficence of
Harvard, and the virtues of Sir Henry Vane. The evils of the sys-
tem may well be forgotten in the glory of its achievements. Without
the Puritans, America would have been a delusion and liberty only a
name.
CHAPTER XVIII.
NEW YORK.— SETTLEMENT.
ILLUSTRIOUS Sir Henry Hudson ! Indomitable explorer, daunt-
less cavalier of the ocean ! Who so worthy to give a name to the
great inland sea of the frozen North as he who gave his life in heroic
combat with its terrors ? Who so fit to become the father of a colony
in the New World as he who braved its perils and revealed its mys-
teries ? And where should the new State be planted unless by the
broad haven — broadest and best on the American coast — and among
the beautiful hills and landscapes
Where The. Hudson came rolling through valleys a-smoke
From the lands of the Iroquois?
«
It was the good fortune of the American colonies to be founded by
men whose lives, like the setting suns of summer, cast behind them
a long and glorious twilight. But for the name and genius of Hud-
son the province of New Nethcrland had never been.
For ten years after the founding of New Amsterdam the colony
was governed by directors. These officers were appointed and sent
I^EW YORK.— SETTLEMENT.
161
out by the Dutch East India Company, in accordance with the char-
ter of that corporation. The settlement on Manhattan Island was as
yet only a village of traders. Not until 1623 was an actual colony
sent from Holland
to New Netherland.
Two years previous-
ly, the Dutch West
India Company had
been organized, with
the exclusive privi-
lege of planting set-
tlements in America.
The charter of this
company was grant-
ed for a period of
twenty-four years,
with the privilege
of renewal ; and the
territory to be colo-
nized extended from
the Strait of Magel-
lan to Hudson's Bay.
Manhattan Island,
with its cluster of
huts, passed at once under the control of the new corpcration.
In April of 1623, the ship New Netherland, having on board a
colony of thirty families, arrived at New Amsterdam. The colonists,
called Walloons, were Dutch Protestant refugees from Flanders, in
Belgium. They were of the same religious faith with the Huguenots of
France, and came to America to find repose from the persecutions of their
own country. Cornelius May was the leader of the company. The
greater number of the new immigrants settled with their friends on Man-
hattan Island ; but the captain, with a party of fifty, passing down the
coast of New Jersey, entered and explored the Bay of Delaware. Sailing
up the bay and river, the company landed on the eastern shore ; here, at
a point a few miles below Camden, where Timber Creek falls into the
Delaware, a site was selected and a block-house built named Fort Nassau.
The natives were won over by kindness ; and when shortly after the fort
was abandoned and the settlers returned to New Amsterdam, the Indians
witnessed their departure with affectionate regret. In the same year
Joris, another Dutch captain, ascended the Hudson to Castle Island,
SIR HENRY HUDSON.
11
162 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
where, nine years previously, Christianson had built the older Fort
Nassau. A flood in the river had swept the island bare. Not deeming
it prudent to restore the works in a place likely to be deluged, Joris
sailed up stream a short distance and rebuilt the fortress on the present
site of Albany. The name of this northern outpost was changed to Fort
Orange ; and here the eighteen families of Joris's company were per-
manently settled.
In 1624 civil government began in New Netherland. Cornelius
May M^as first governor of the colony. His official duties, however, were
only such as belonged to the superintendent of a trading-post. In the
next year William Verhulst became director of the settlement. Herds
of cattle, swine and sheep were brought over from Holland and distributed
among the settlers. In January of 1626, Peter Minuit, of Wesel, was
regularly appointed by the Dutch West India Company as governor of
New Netherland. Until this time the natives had retained the owner-
ship of Manhattan Island ; but on Minuit's arrival, in May, an offer of
purchase was made and accepted. The whole island, containing more
than twenty thousand acres, was sold to the Dutch for twenty-four dol-
lars. The southern point of land was selected as a site for fortifications ;
there a block-house was built and surrounded with a palisade. New
Amsterdam was already a town of thirty houses. In the first year of
Minuit's administration were begun the settlements of Wallabout and
Brooklyn, on Long Island.
The Dutch of New Amsterdam and the Pilgrims of New Plymouth
were early and fast friends. The Puritans themselves had but recently
arrived from Holland, and could not forget the kind treatment which
they had had in that country. They and the Walloons were alike exiles
fleeing from persecution and tyranny. On two occasions, in 1627, a
Dutch embassy was sent to Plymouth with an expression of good Mill.
The English were cordially invited to remove without molestation to the
more fertile valley of the Connecticut. Governor Bradford replied with
words of cheer and sympathy. The Dutch were honestly advised of the
claims of England to the country of the Hudson ; and the people of New
Netherland were cautioned to make good their titles by accepting new
deeds from the council of Plymouth. A touch of jealousy was manifested
when the Dutch were warned not to send their trading-boats into the
Bay of Narragansett.
In 1628 the population of Manhattan numbered two hundred and
seventy. The settlers devoted their whole energies to the fur-trade.
Every bay, inlet and river between Rhode Island and tlie Delaware was
visited by their vessels. The colony gave promise of rapid development
2fEW YORK.— SETTLEMENT. 163
and of great profit to the proprietors. If the houses were rude and
thatched with straw, there were energy and thrift within. If only wooden
chimneys carried up the smoke, the fires of the hearthstones were kindled
with laughter and song. If creaking windmills flung abroad their un-
gainly arms in the winds of Long Island Sound, it was proof that the
people had families to feed and meant to feed them.
The West India Company now came forward -nith a new and pecu-
liar scheme of colonization. In 1629, the corporation created a Chaeter
OF Pkivileges, under which a class of proprietors called patroons were
authorized to possess and colonize the country. Each patroon might
select anywhere in New Netherland a tract of land not more than sixteen
miles in length, and of a breadth to be determined by the location. On
the banks of a navigable river not more than eight miles might be ap-
propriated by one proprietor. Each district was to be held in fee simple
by the patroon, who was empowered to exercise over his estate and its
inhabitants the same authority as did the hereditary lords of Europe.
The conditions were that the estates should be held as dependencies of
Holland ; that each patroon should purchase his domain of the Indians ;
and that he should, within four years from the date of his title, establish
on his manor a colony of not less than fifty persons. Education and re-
ligion were commended in the charter, but no provision was made for
the support of either.
Under the provisions of this instrument five estates were imme-
diately established. Three of them, lying contiguous, embraced a district
of twenty-four miles in the valley of the Hudson above and below Fort
Orange. The fourth manor was laid out by Michael Pauw on Staten
Island ; and the Afth, and most important, included the southern half of
the present State of Delaware. To this estate a colony was sent out from
Holland in the spring of 1631. Samuel Godyn was patroon of the do-
main, but the immediate management was entrusted to David Peterson de
Vries. With a company of thirty immigrants, he reached the entrance
to Delaware Bay, and anchored within Cape Henlopen. Landing five
miles up the bay, at the mouth of Lewis Creek, the colony selected a site
and laid the foundations of Lewistown, the oldest settlement in Delaware.
After a year of successful management, De Vries returned to Hol-
land, leaving the settlement in charge of Gillis Hosset. The latter, a
man of no sagacity, soon brought the colony to ruin. An Indian chief
who offended him was seized and put to death. The natives, who thus
fer had treated the strangers with deference and good faith, were aroused
to vengeance. Rising suddenly out of an ambuscade upon the terrified
colonists, they left not a man alive. The houses and palisades were
164 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
burned to the ground ; nothing but bones and ashes remained to testify
of savage passion. When De Vries returned, in December of 1632, he
found only the blackened ruins of his flourishing hamlet. He sailed first
to Virginia for a cargo of supplies, and thence to New Amsterdam ; but
before the colony could be re-established, Lord Baltimore had received
from the English government a patent which embraced the whole of
Delaware ; the weaker, though older, claim of the Dutch patroon gave
way before the charter of his more powerful rival.
In April of 1633, Minuit was superseded in the government of New
Netherland by Wouter van Twiller. Three months previously the Dutch
had purchased of the natives the soil around Hartford, and had erected a
block-house within the present limits of the city. This was the first
fortress built on the Connecticut River ; but the Puritans, though pro-
fessing friendship, were not going to give up the valley without a struggle.
In October of the same year an armed vessel, sent out from Plymouth,
sailed up the river and openly defied the Dutch commander at Hartford.
Passing the fortress, the English proceeded up stream to the mouth of
the river Farmington, where they landed and built Fort Windsor. Two
years later, by the building of Saybrook, at the mouth of the Connecticut,
the English obtained command of the river both above and below the
Dutch fort. The block-house at Hartford, being thus cut off, \xas> com-
paratively useless to the authorities of New Netherland ; English toAvns
multiplied in the neighborhood ; and the Dutch finally surrendered their
eastern outpost to their more powerful rivals.
Four of the leading European nations had now established perma-
nent colonies in America. The fifth to plant an American State was
Sweden. As early as 1626, Gustavus Adolphus, the Protestant king
of that country and the hero of his age, had formed the design of estab-
lishing settlements in the West. For this purpose a company of mer-
chants had been organized, to whose capital the king himself contributed
four hundred thousand dollars. The objects had in view were to form a
refuge for persecuted Protestants and to extend Swedish commerce. But
before his plans of colonization could be carried into effect, Gustavus be-
came involved in the Thirty Years' War, then raging in Germany. The
company was disorganized, and the capital wasted in the purchase of mili-
tary stores. In November of 1632 the Swedish kino; was killed at the
battle of Liitzen. For a while it seemed that tlie plan of colonizing
America had ended in failure, but Oxenstiern, the great Swedish minis-
ter, took up the work which his master had left unfinished. The charter
of the company was renewed, and after four years of preparation the
enterprise was brought to a successful issue.
NEW YORK— SETTLEMENT. tQ5
In the mean time, Peter Minuit, the recent governor of New
Netherland, had left the service of Holland and entered that of Sweden.
To him was entrusted the management of the first Swedish colony which
was sent to America. Late in the year 1637, a company of Swedes and
Finns left the harbor of Stockholm, and in the following February
arrived in Delaware Bay. Never before had the Northerners beheld so
beautiful a land. They called Cape Henlopen the Point of Paradise.
The whole country, sweeping around the west side of the bay and up the
river to the falls at Trenton, was honorably purchased of the Indians.
In memory of native land, the name of New Sweden was given to this
fine territory. The colony landed just below the mouth of the Brandy-
wine, in the northern part of the present State of Delaware. On the left
bank of a small tributary, at a point about six miles from the bay, a spot
was chosen for the settlement. Here the foundations of a fort were laid,
and the immigrants soon provided themselves with houses. The creek
and the fort were both named in honor of Christiana, the maiden queen
of Sweden.
The colony prospered greatly. By each returning ship letters were
borne to Stockholm, describing the loveliness of the country. Immigra-
tion became rapid and constant. At one time, in 1640, more than a hun-
dred families, unable to find room on the crowded vessels which were
leaving the Swedish capital, were turned back to their homes. The
banks of Delaware Bay and River were dotted with pleasant hamlets.
On every hand appeared the proofs of well-directed industry. Of all
the early settlers in America, none were more cheerful, intelligent and
virtuous than the Swedes.
From the first, the authorities of New Amsterdam were jealous
of the colony on the Delaware. Sir William Kieft, who had succeeded
the incompetent Van Twiller in the governorship, sent an earnest remon-
strance to Christiana, warning the settlers of their intrusion on Dutch
territory. But the Swedes, giving little heed to the complaints of their
neighbors, went on enlarging their borders and strengthening their out-
posts. Governor Kieft was alarmed and indignant at these aggressions,
and as a precautionary measure sent a party to rebuild Fort Nassau, on
the old site below Camden. The Swedes, regarding this fortress as a
menace to their colony, adopted active measures of defence. Ascending
the river to within six miles of the mouth of the Schuylkill, they landed
on the island of Tinicum, and built an impregnable fort of hemlock
logs. Here, in 1643, Governor Printz established his residence. To
Pennsylvania, as well as to Delaware, Sweden contributed the earliest
colony.
166 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
In 1640, New Netherland became involved in a war with the
[ndians of Long Island and New Jersey. The natives of the lower
[ludson were a weak and unwarlike people; under just treatment they
would have faithfully kept the j)eace. But dishonest traders had mad-
:^Gncd them with rum and then defrauded and abused them. Burning
with resentment and hate, the savages of the Jersey shore crossed over to
Staten Island, laid waste the farms and butchered the inhabitants. New
Amsterdam was for a while endangered, but was soon put in a state
of defence. A company of militia was organized and sent against the
Delawares of New Jersey, but nothing resulted from the expedition. A
large bounty was offered for every member of the tribe of the Raritans,
and many were hunted to death. On both sides the war degenerated
into treachery and murder. Through the mediation of Roger Williams,
the great peacemaker of Rhode Island, a truce was obtiiined, and imme-
diately broken. A chieftain's son, who had been made drunk and robbed,
went to the nearest settlement and killed the first Hollander whom he
met. Governor Kieft demanded the criminal, but the sachems refused
to give him up. They offered to pay a heav}' fine for the wrong done,
but Kieft would accept nothing less than the life of the murderer.
"While the dispute was still unsettled, a party of the terrible Mo-
riawks came down the river to claim and enforce their supremacy over
the natives of the coast. The timid Algonquins in the neighborhood of
New Amsterdam cowered before the mighty warriors of the North,
huddled together on the bank of the Hudson, and begged assistance of
the Dutch. Here the vindictive Kieft saw an opportunity of wholesale
destruction. A company of soldiers set out secretly from Manhattan,
crossed the river and discovered the lair of the Indians. The place was
surrounded by night, and the first notice of danger given to the savages
was the roar of muskets. Nearly a hundred of the poor wretches were
killed before daydawn. Women who shrieked for pity were mangled to
death, and children were thrown into the river.
When it was known among the tribes that the Dutch, and not the
Mohawks, were the authors of this outrage, the war was renewed with
.fury. The Indians were in a frenz}^ Dividing into small war-parties,
Jiey concealed themselves in the woods and swamps ; then rose, without a
moment's warning, upon defenceless farmhouses, burning and butchering
without mercy. At this time that noted woman Mrs. Anne Hutchinson
was living with her son-in-law in the valley of the Housatonic. Her
liouse was surrounded and set on fire by the savages ; every member of
the family except one child wa.s cruelly murdered. jNIi-s. Hutchinson
Verself was burned alive.
NEW YORK.— ADMINISTRATION OF STU YVES ANT. 167
In 1643, Captain John Underhill, a fugitive from Massachusetts,
was appointed to the command of the Dutch forces. At the head of a
regiment raised by Governor Kieft he invaded New Jersey, and brought
the Delawares into subjection. A decisive battle was fought on Long
Island ; and at Greenwich, in Western Connecticut, the power of the In-
dians was finally broken. Again the ambassadors of the Iroquois came
forward with proposals for peace. Both parties were anxious to rest from
the rum and devastation of war. On the 30th of August, 1645, a treaty
was concluded at Fort Amsterdam.
Nearly all of the bloodshed and sorrow of these five years of war
may be charged to Governor Kieft. He was a revengeful and cruel man,
whose idea of government was to destroy whatever opposed him. The
people had many times desired to make peace with the Indians, but the
project had always been defeated by the headstrong passions of the-
governor. A popular party, headed by the able De Vries, at last grew
powerful enough to defy his authority. As soon as the war was ended,
petitions for his removal were circulated and signed by the people. Two
years after the treaty, the Dutch West India Company revoked his com-
mission and appointed Peter Stuyvesant to succeed him. In 1647, Kieft
embarked for Em'ope; but the heavy-laden merchantman in y,'hich he
sailed was dashed to pieces by a storm on the coast of Wales, and the
guilty governor of New Netherland found a grave in the sea.
CHAPTER XIX.
NEW YORK.— ADMINISTRATION OF STUYVESANT.
THE honest and soldierly Petee Stuyvesant was the last and
greatest of the governors of New Netherland. He entered upon his
duties on the 11th of May, 1647, and continued in office for more than
seventeen years. His first care was to conciliate the Indians. By the
wisdom and liberality of his government the wayward red men were re-
claimed from hostility and hatred. So intimate and cordial became the
relations between the natives and the Dutch that they were suspected of
making common cause against the Englisli; even Massachusetts was
alarmed lest such an alliance should be formed. But the policy of
Governor Stuyvesant was based on nobler principles.
Until now the West India Company had had exclusive control of
168 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the commerce of New Netherland. In the first year of the new adminis-
tration this monopoly was abolished, and regular export duties were sub-
stituted. The benefit of the change was at once apparent in the improve-
ment of the Dutch province. In one of the letters written to Stuyvesant
by the secretary of the company, the remarkable prediction is made that
the commerce of New Amsterdam should cover every ocean and the ships
of all nations crowd into her harbor. But for many years the growth of
the city was slow. As late as the middle of the century, the better parts
of Manhattan Island were still divided among the farmers. Central Park
was a forest of oaks and chestnuts.
In 1650, a boundary-line was fixed between New England and New
Netherland. The Dutch Mere fearful lest the English should reach the
Hudson and cut off the fur-trade between Fort Orange and New Amster-
'dam. Governor Stuyvesant met the ambassadors of the Eastern colonies
at Hartford, and after much discussion an eastern limit Avas set to the
Dutch possessions. The line there established extended across Long
Island north and south, passing through Oyster Bay, and thence to Green-
wich, on the other side of the sound. From this point northward the
dividing-line was nearly identical with the present boundary of Connec-
ticut on the west. This treaty was ratified by the colonies, by the West
India Company and by the states-general of Holland; but the English
government treated the matter with indifference and contempt.
Stuyvesant had less to fear from the colony of New Sweden. The
people of New Netherland outnumbered the Swedes as ten to one, and
the Dutch claim to the country of the Delaware had never been re-
nounced. In 1651, an armament left New Amsterdam, entered the bay
and came to anchor at a point on the western shore five miles below the
mouth of the Brandy wine. On the present site of New Castle, Fort Cas-
imir was built and garrisoned with Dutch soldiers. This act was
equivalent to a declaration of war. The Swedish settlement of Christiana
was almost in sight of the hostile fortress, and a confliict could hardly be
avoided. Rising, the governor of the Swedes, looked on quietly until
Fort Casimir was completed, then captured the place by stratagem, over-
jiowered the garrison and hoisted the flag of Sweden.
It Avas a short-lived triumph. The West India Company were
secretly pleased that the Swedes had committed an act of open violence.
Orders were at once issued to Stuyvesant to visit the Swedish colonists
with vengeance, and to compel their submission or drive them from the
Delaware. In September of 1655 the orders of the company were car-
ried out to the letter. The old governor put himself at the head of more
than six hundred troops — a number almost equal to the entire poi)ulation
NEW YORK.— ADMINISTRATION OF STUYVESANT. 169
of New Sweden — and sailed to Delaware Bay. Resistance was hopeless.
The Dutch forces were landed at New Castle, and the Swedes gave way.
Before the 25th of the month every fort belonging to the colony had been
forced to capitulate. Governor Rising was captured, but was treated with
great respect. Honorable terms were granted to all, and in a few days
the authority of New Netherland was established throughout the country.
Except a few turbulent spirits who removed to Maryland and Virginia,
the submission was universal. After an existence of less than eighteen
years, the little State of New Sweden had ceased to be. The American
possessions and territorial claims of France, England, Holland, Sweden
and Spain will be best understood from an examination of the accom-
panying map, drawn for the year 1655.
How hardly can the nature of savages be restrained I While Gov-
ernor Stuyvesant was absent on his expedition against the Swedes, the
Algonquin tribes rose in rebellion. The poor creatures were going to
take New Amsterdam. In a fleet of sixty-four canoes they appeared be-
fore the town, yelling and discharging arrows. What could their puny
missiles do against the walls of a European fortress? After paddling
about until their rage, but not their hate, was spent, the savages went on
shore and began their old work of burning and murder. The return of
the Dutch forces from the Delaware induced the sachems to sue for peace,
which Stuyvesant granted on better terms than the Indians had deserved.
The captives were ransomed, and the treacherous tribes were allowed to
go with trifling punishments.
For eight years after the conquest of New Sweden the peace of New
Netherland was unbroken. In 1663 the natives of the county of Ulster,
on the Hudson, broke out in war. The town of Esopus, now Kingston,
was attacked and destroyed. Sixty-five of the inhabitants were either
tomahawked or carried into captivity. To punish this outrage a strong
force was sent from New Amsterdam. The Indians fled, hoping to find
refuge in the woods ; but the Dutch soldiers pursued them to their vil-
lages, burned their wigwams and killed every warrior who could be over-
taken. As winter came on, the humbled tribe began to beg for mercy.
In December a truce was granted; and in May of the following yea*'
a treaty of peace was concluded.
Governor Stuyvesant had great difficulty in defending his province
beyond the Delaware. The queen of Sweden and her ministers at Stock-
holm still looked fondly to their little American colony, and cherished
the hope of recovering the conquered territory. A more dangerous com-
petitor was found in Lord Baltimore, of Maryland, whose patent, given
under the great seal of England, covered all the territory between the
170 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Chesapeake and Delaware Bay, as far north as the latitude of Phila-
delphia. Berkeley, of Virginia, also claimed New Sweden as a part of
his dominions. Connecticut pushed her settlements westward on Long
Island, and purchased all the remaining Indian claims between her
western frontier and the Hudson. Massachusetts boldly declared her in-
tention to extend her boundaries to Fort Orange. The indignant Stuy-
vcsant asked the agents of Connecticut where the province of New
Netherland could shortly be found ; and the agents coolly answered that
tlicy did not know.
Discord at home added to the governor's embarrassments. For
many years the Dutch had witnessed the growth and prosperity of the
English colonies. Boston had outgrown New Amsterdam. The schools
of Massachusetts and Connecticut flourished; the academy on Man-
hattan, after a sickly career of two years, was discontinued. In New
Nctherland heavy taxes were levied for the support of the poor ; New
England had no poor. Liberty and right were the subjects of debate in
every English village ; to the Dutch farmers and traders such Avords had
little meaning. The people of New Netherland grew emulous of the
progress of their powerful neighbors, and attributed their own abasement
to the mismanagement and selfish greed of the West India Company.
Without actual disloyalty to Holland, the Dutch came to prefer the laws
and customs of England. Under these accumulating troubles the faithful
Stuyvesant was wellnigh overwhelmed.
Such was the condition of affairs at the beginning of 1664. Eng-
land and Holland were at peace. Neither nation had reason to appre-
hend an act of violence from the other. In all that followed, the arbi-
trary principles and unscrupulous disposition of the English king were
fully manifested. On the 12th of March in this year the duke of York
received at the hands of his brother, Charles IL, two extensive patents
for American territory. The first grant included the district reaching
from the Kennebec to the St. Croix River, and the second embraced tlie
whole country between the Connecticut and the Delaware. Without re-
gard to the rights of Holland, in utter contempt of the West India Com-
pany, through whose exertions the valley of the Hudson had been peopled,
with no respect for the wishes of the Dutch, or even for the voice of his
own Parliament, the English monarch in one rash hour despoiled a sister
kingdom of a well-earned province.
The duke of York made haste to secure his territory. No time
must be left for the states-general to protest against the outrage. An
English squadron was immediately equipped, put under command of
Kichard Nicolls and sent to America. In July the armament reached
NEW YORK.— ADMINISTRATION OF STUYVESANT. 171
Boston, and tlience proceeded against New Amsterdam. On the 28th of
August, the fleet passed the Narrows, and anchored at Gravesend Bay.
T]ie English camp was pitched at Brooklyn Ferry; and before the Dutch
had recovered from their surprise, the whole of Long Island was sub-
dued. An embassy came over from New Amsterdam. Governor Stuy-
vesant, ever true to his employers, demanded to know the meaning of all
this hostile array. To
receive the surrender
of New Netherland
was the quiet answer
of Nicolls. There
must be an immediate
acknowledgment of the
sovereignty of Eng-
land. Those who sub-
mitted should have the
rights of Englishmen ;
those who refused
should hear the crash
of cannon-balls. The
Dutch council of New
Amsterdam was im-
mediately convened.
It was clear that the
burgomasters meant to
surrender. The stormy
old governor exliorted
them to rouse to action and fight; some one replied that the Dutch
West India Company was not worth fighting for. Burning with indig-
nation, Stuyvesant snatched up the written proposal of Nicolls and tore
it to tatters in the presence of his council. It was all in vain. The
brave old man was forced to sign the capitulation ; and on the 8th of
September, 1664, New Netherland ceased to exist. The English flag
was hoisted over the fort and town, and the name of New York was
substituted for New Amsterdam. The surrender of Fort Orange, now
named Albany, followed on the 24th; and on the 1st of October the
Swedish and Dutch settlements on the Delaware capitulated. The con-
quest was complete. The supremacy of Great Britain in America was
finally established. From the north-east corner of Maine to the southern
limits of Georgia, every mile of the American coast was under the flag
of England.
PETER STUYVESANT.
172 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XX.
HJEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH.
RICHARD XICOLLS, the first English governor of New York,
began his duties by settling the boundaries of his province. It was
a work full of trouble and vexation. As early as 1623 the whole of Long
Island had been granted to the earl of Stirling. Connecticut also claimed
and occupied all that part of the island included in the present county of
Suffolk. Against both of these claimants the patent of the duke of York
was now to be enforced by his deputy Nicolls. The claim of Stirling was
fairly purchased by the governor, but the pretensions of Connecticut were
arbitrarily set aside. This action was the source of so much discontent
that the duke was constrained to compensate Connecticut by making a
favorable change in her south-west boundary-line.
Tm'O months before the conquest of New Netherland by the Eng-
lish, the irregular territory between the Hudson and the Dekware, as far
north as a point on the latter river in the latitude of forty-one degrees
and forty minutes, was granted to Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret.
This district, corresponding, except on the northern boundary, with the
present State of New Jersey, was now wrested from the jurisdiction of
New York, and a separate government established by the proprietors.
The country below the Delaware, until recently called New Sweden, but
now named The Territoeies, was consolidated with New York and
ruled by deputies appointed by the governors of that province. Finally,
the new name conferred by Nicolls on his capital was extended to all
the country formerly called New Netherland.
At the first the people were deluded with many promises of civil
'iberty. To secure this, the Dutch, against the passionate appeals of the
,xitriotic Stuyvesant, had voluntarily surrendered themselves to the Eng-
lish government. But it was a poor sort of civil liberty that any province
was likely to obtain from one of the Stuart kings of England. The
promised right of representation in a general assembly of the people was
evaded and withheld. To this was added a greater grief in the annulling
of the old titles by which, for half a century, the Dutch farmers had held
their lands. The people were obliged to accept new deeds at the hands
NEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH. 173
of tlie English governor, and to pay him therefor such sums as yielded an
immense revenue. The evil done to the province, however, was less than
might have been expected from so arbitrary and despotic a government.
In 1667, Nicolls was superseded by Lovelace. With less ability
and generosity than his predecessor, he proved a greater tyrant. The bad
principles of the system established by the duke of York were now fully
developed. The people became dissatisfied and gloomy. Protests against
the government and petitions for redress were constantly presented, and
constantly rejected with contempt. The discontent was universal. The
towns of Southold, Southampton and Easthampton resisted the tax-
gatherers. The people of Huntington voted that they were robbed of the
privileges of Englishmen. The villagers of Jamaica, Flushing and Hemp-
stead passed a resolution that the governor's decree of taxation was contrary
to the laws of the English nation. The only attention which Lovelace
and his council paid to these resolutions was to declare them scandalous,
illegal and seditious, and to order them to be publicly burnt before the
town-house of New York. When the Swedes, naturally a quiet and
submissive people, resisted the exactions of the government, they were
visited with additional severity. " If there is any more murmuring against
the taxes, make them so heavy that the people can do nothing but think
how to pay them," said Lovelace in his instructions to his deputy.
The Dutch and the English colonists were always friends. Not
once in the whole history of the country did they lift the sword against
each other. Even while England and Holland were at war, as they were
in 1652-54, the American subjects of the two nations remained at peace.
Another war followed that act of violence by which, in 1664, the duke
of York possessed himself of New Netherland ; but the conflict did not
extend to America. A third time, in 1672, Charles II. was induced by
the king of France to begin a contest with the Dutch government. This
time, indeed, the struggle extended to the colonies, and New York was
revolutionized, but not by the action of her own people. In 1673 a small
squadron was fitted out by Holland and placed under command of the
gallant Captain Evertsen. The fleet sailed for America, and arrived be-
fore Manhattan on the 30th of July. The governor of New York was
absent, and Manning, the deputy-governor, was a coward. The defences
of the city were dilapidated, and the people refused to strengthen them.
Within four hours after the arrival of the squadron the fort was sur-
rendered. The city capitulated, and the M^hole j^rovince yielded without
a struggle. New Jersey and Delaware sent in their submission ; the
name of New Netherland was revived ; and the authority of Hoiland was
restored from Connecticut to Maryland.
174 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The reconquest of New York by the Dutch was only a brief mili-
taay occupation of the country. The civil authority of Holland was never
reestablished. In 1674, Charles II. was obliged by his Parliament to
conclude a treaty of peace. There was the usual clause requiring the
restoration of all conquests made during the war. New York reverted
to the English government, and the rights of the duke were again recog-
nized in the province. To make his authority doubly secure for the
future, he obtained from his brother, the king, a new patent confirming
the provisions of the former charter. The man who now received the
appointment of deputy-governor of New York was none other than Sir
Edmund Andros. On the last day of October the Dutch forces Avere
finally withdrawn, and Andros assumed the government.
It was a sad sort of government for the people. The worst prac-
tices of Lovelace's administration were revived. The principles of arbi-
trary rule were openly avoM'cd. Taxes were levied without authority of
law, and the appeals and protests of the people were treated with derision.
The clamor for a popular legislative assembly had become so great that
Andros was on the point of yielding. He even wrote a letter to the duke
of York advising that thick-headed prince to grant the people the right
of electing a colonial legislature. The duke replied that popular assem-
• blies were seditious and dangerous ; that they only fostered discontent and
disturbed the peace of the government ; and finally, that he did not see
any use for them. To the people of New York the civil liberty of the
New England colonies seemed farther off than ever.
By the terms of his grant the duke of York claimed jurisdiction
over all the territory between the Connecticut River and Maryland. To
assert and maintain this claim of his master was a part of the deputy-
governor's business in America. The first effort to extend the duke's
territorial rights to the limits of his charter was made in July of 1675.
With some armed sloops and a company of soldiers, Andros proceeded to
the mouth of the Connecticut in the hope of establishing his jurisdiction.
The general assembly of the colony had heard of his coming, and had
sent word to Captain Bull, who commanded the fort at Saybrook, to re-
sist Andros in the name of the king. When the latter came in sight and
hoisted the flag of England, the same colors were raised within the fortress.
The royal governor was permitted to land ; but when he began to read
his commission, he was ordered in the king's name to desist. Overawed
by the threatening looks of the Saybrook militia, Andros retired to his
boats and set sail for Long Island.
Notwithstanding the grant of New Jersey to Carteret and Berkeley,
the attempt was now made to extend the jurisdiction of New York over
NEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH. 175
the lower province. Andros issued a decree that ships sailing to and
from the ports of New Jersey should pay a duty at the custom-house
of New York. This tyrannical action was openly resisted. Andros
attempted to frighten the assembly of New Jersey into submission, and
proceeded so far as to arrest Philip Carteret, the deputy-governor. But
it was all of no use. The representatives of the people declared them-
selves to be under the protection of the Great Charter, wliich not even the
duke of York, or his brother the king, could alter or annul. In August
of 1682 the territories beyond the Delaware were granted by the duke to
William Penn. This little district, first settled by the Swedes, afterward
conquered by the Dutch, then transferred to England on the conquest of
New Netherland, was now finally separated from the jurisdiction of New
York and joined to Pennsylvania. The governors of the latter province
continued to exercise authority over the three counties on the Delaware
until the American Revolution.
At the close of Andros's administration, in 1683, Thomas Dongan,
a Catholic, became governor of New York. For thirty years the people
had been clamoring for a general assembly. Just before Andros left the
province, the demand became more vehement than ever. The retiring
governor, himself of a despotic disposition, counseled the duke to concede
the right of representation to the people. At last James yielded, not so
much with the view of extending popular rights, as with the hope of in-
creasing his revenues from the improved condition of his province,
Dongan, the new governor, came with full instructions to call an assem-
bly of all the freeholders of New York, by whom certain persons of their
own number should be elected to take part in the government. Seventy
years had passed since the settlement of Manhattan Island ; and now for
the first time the people were permitted to choose their own rulers and to
frame their owp laws.
The first act of the new assembly was to declare that the supreme
legislative power of the province resided in the governor, the council and
THE PEOPLE. All freeholders were granted the right of suffrage ; trial
by jury was established ; taxes should no more be levied except by con-
sent of the assembly; soldiers should not be quartered on the people;
martial law should not exist ; no person accepting the general doctrines
of religion should be in any wise distressed or persecuted. All the rights
and privileges of Massachusetts and Virginia were carefully written by
the zealous law-makers of New York in their first charter of liberties.
In July of 1684 an important treaty was concluded at Albany.
The governors of New York and Virginia were met in convention by the
sachems of the Iroquois, and the terms of a lasting peace were settled.
176 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
A long war ensued between the Five Nations and the French. The
Jesuits of Canada employed every artifice and intrigue to induce the
Indians to break their treaty with the English, but all to no purpose ;
the alliance was faithfully observed. In 1684, and again in 1687, the
French invaded the territory of the Iroquois ; but the mighty Mohawks
and Oneidas drove back their foes with loss and disaster. By the barrier
of the friendly Five Nations on the north, the English and Dutch colo-
nies were screened from danger.
In 1685 the duke of York became kin"; of England. It was soon
found that even the monarch of a great nation could violate his pledges.
King James became the open antagonist of the government which had
been established under his own directions. The popular legislature of
New York was abrogated. An odious tax was levied by an arbitraiy
decree. Printing-presses were forbidden in the province. All the old
abuses were revived and made a public boast.
In December of 1686, Edmund Andros became governor of all
New England. It was a part of his plan to extend his dominion over
New York and New Jersey. To the former ])rovince, Francis Nicholson,
the lieutenant-general of Andros, was sent as de})nty. Dongan was super-
seded, and until the English Revolution of 1688, New York was ruled
as a dejiendency of New England. When the news of that event and of
the accession of William of Orange reached the province, tliere was a
general tumult of rejoicing. The people rose in rebellion against the
government of Nicholson, who was glad enough to escape from New
York and return to England.
The leader of the insurrection was Jacob Leisler, a captain of the
militia. A committee of ten took upon themselves the task of reorganizing
the government. Leisler was commissioned to take possession of the fort
of New York. Most of the troops in the city, together witli five hundred
volunteers, proceeded against the fort, which was surrendered without a
struggle. The insurgents published a declaration in which they avowed
their loyalty to the prince of Orange, their countryman, and expressed
their determination to yield immediate obedience to his authority. A
provisional government was organized, with Leisler at the head. Tlie
provincial councilors, who were friends and adherents of the deposed
Nicholson, left the city and repaired to Albany. Here the party who
were oj)posed to the usurpation of Leisler proceeded to organize a second
provisional government. Both factions were careful to exercise authority
in the name of William and Mary, the new sovereigns of England.
In September of 1689, ]\Iilborne, the son-in-law of Leisler, was
sent to Albany to demand the surrender of the town and fort. Court-
NEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH. 177
laud and Bayard, who were the leaders of the northern faction, opposed
the demand with so much vigor that Milborne was obliged to retire with-
out accomplishing his object. Such was the condition of affairs at the
beginning of King William's War. How the village of Schenectady was
destroyed by the French and Indians, and how an unsuccessful expedition
by land and water was planned against Quebec and Montreal, has been
narrated in the history of Massachusetts. Such was the dispiriting effect
of these disasters upon the people of Albany and the north that a second
effort made by Milborne against the government of the opposing faction
was successful ; and in the spring of 1690 the authority of Leisler as tem-
porary governor of New York was recognized throughout the province.
The summer was spent in fruitless preparations to invade and conquer
Canada. The general assembly was convened at the capital ; but little
was accomplished except a formal recognition of the insurrectionary
government of Leisler.
In January of 1691, Richard Ingoldsby arrived at New York.
He bore a commission as captain, and brought the intelligence that Colo-
nel Sloughter had been appointed royal governor of the province. Leisler
received Ingoldsby with courtesy, and offered him quarters in the city ;
but the latter, without authority from either the king or the governor,
haughtily demanded the surrender of His Majesty's fort. Leisler refused
to yield, but expressed his willingness to submit to any one who bore
a commission from King William or Colonel Sloughter. On the 19th
of March the governor himself arrived ; and Leisler on the same day
despatched messengers, tendering his service and submission. The mes-
eengers were arrested, and Ingoldsby, the enemy and rival of Leisler, was
sent with verbal orders for the surrender of the fort. Leisler foresaw his
doom, and hesitated. He wrote a letter to Sloughter, expressing a desire
to make a personal surrender of the post to the governor. The letter was
unanswered; Ingoldsby pressed his demand; Leisler wavered, capitu-
lated, and with Milborne was seized and hurried to prison.
As soon as the royal government was organized the two prisoners
were brought to trial. The charge was rebellion and treason. Dudley,
the chief-justice of New England, rendered a decision that Leisler had
been a usurper. The prisoners refused to plead, were convicted and sen-
tenced to death. Sloughter, however, determined to know the pleasure
of the king before putting the sentence into execution. But the royalist
assembly of New York had already come together, and the members were
resolved that the prisoners should be hurried to their death. The governor
"Was invited to a banquet ; and when heated with strong drink, the death-
Avarrant was thrust before him for his signature. He succeeded in affix-
is
178 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ing his name to the fatal parchment ; and almost before the fumes of his
drunken revel had passed away, his victims had met their fate. On the
1 6th of May, Leisler and Milborne were brought from prison, led through
a drenching rain to the scaffold and hanged. Within less than a year
afterward, their estates, which had been confiscated, were restored to their
heirs; and in 1695 the attainder of the families was removed.
The same summer that witnessed the execution of Leisler and
Milborne was noted for the renewal of the treaty with the Iroquois. At
Albany, Governor Sloughter met the sachems of the Five Nations, and
the former terms of fidelity and friendship were reaffirmed. In the fol-
lowing year the valiant JNIajor Schuyler, at the head of the New York
militia, joined a war-party of the Iroquois in a successful expedition
against the French settlements beyond Lake Champlain. Meanwhile,
the assembly of the province had been in session at the capital. Although
the representatives were royalists, a resolution was passed against arbitrary
taxation, and another which declared the people to be a part of the govern-
ing power of the colony. It was not long until one of the governors had
occasion to say that the people of New York were growing altogether too
big with the privileges of Englishmen.
Soon after his return from Albany, Sloughter's career was cut
short by death. He was succeeded in the office of governor by Benjamin
Fletcher, a man of bad passions and poor abilities. The new executive
arrived in September of 1692. One of the first measures of his adminis-
tration was to renew the recent treaty with the Iroquois. It was at this
time the avowed purpose of the English monarch to place under a com-
mon government all the territory between the Connecticut River and
Delaware Bay. To further this project, Fletcher was armed with an
ample and comprehensive commission. He was made governor of New
York, and commander-in-chief not only of the troops of his own province,
but also of the militia of Connecticut and New Jersey. In the latter
province he met with little opposition ; but the Puritans of Hartford re-
sisted so stubbornly that the alarmed and disgusted governor was glad to
return to his own capital.
The next effort of the administration was to establish the Episcopal
Church in New York. The Dutch and the English colonists of the
province were still distinct in nationality ; the former, though Calvinists,
were not unfriendly to the Episcopal service which the Puritans so
heartily despised. In a religious controversy between Fletcher's council
and the English, the Dutch, not being partisans of either, looked on with
comparative indifference. But when the governor w'as on the point of
succeeding with his measures, the general assembly interposed, passed a
NEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH. 179
decree of toleration, and brought the pretentious Church to a level with
the rest. Fletcher gave vent to his indignation by calling his legislators
a set of unmannerly and insubordinate boors.
In 1696 the territory of New York was invaded by the French
under Frontenac, governor of Canada. The faithful Iroquois made com-
mon cause with the colonial forces, and the formidable expedition of the
French was turned into confusion. Before the loss could be repaired
and a second invasion undertaken. King William's War was ended by the
treaty of Ryswick. In the following year, the earl of Bellomont, an
Irish nobleman of excellent character and popular sympathies, succeeded
Fletcher in the government of New York. His administration of less
than four years was the happiest era in the history of the colony. His
authority, like that of his predecessor, extended over a part of New Eng-
land. Massachusetts and New Hampshire were under his jurisdiction,
but Connecticut and Rhode Island remained independent. To this period
belong the exploits of the famous pirate. Captain William Kidd.
For centuries piracy had been the common vice of the high seas.
The nations were just now beginning to take active measures for the sup-
pression of the atrocious crime. The honest and humane Bellomont was
one who was anxious to see the end of piratical violence. His commission
contained a clause which authorized the arming of a vessel to range the
ocean in pursuit of pirates. The ship was to bear the English flag, and
was also commissioned as a privateer to prey upon the commerce of the
enemies of England. The vessel was owned by a company of distin-
guished and honorable persons ; Governor Bellomont himself was one of
the proprietors ; and William Kidd received from the English admiralty
a commission as captain. The ship sailed from England before Bello-
mont's departure for New York. Hardly had the earl reached his
province when the news came that Kidd himself had turned pirate and
become the terror of the seas. For two years he continued his infamous
career, then appeared publicly in the streets of Boston, was seized, sent
to England, tried, convicted and hanged. What disposition was made
of the enormous treasures which the pirate-ship had gathered on the ocean
has never been ascertained. It has been thought that the vast hoard of
ill-gotten wealth was buried in the sands of Long Island. Governor
Bellomont was charged with having shared the booty, but an in-
vestigation before the House of Commons showed the accusation to be
groundless.
In striking contrast with the virtues and wisdom of Bellomont
were the vices and folly of Lord Cornbury, who succeeded him. He
arrived at New York in the beginning of May, 1702. A month
180 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
previously the proprietors of New Jersey had surrendered their rights
in the province to the EngHsh Crown. All obstacles being thus removed,
the two colonies were formally united in one government under the
authority of Cornbury. For a period of thirty-six yeai-s the territories,
though with separate assemblies, continued under the jurisdiction of a
single executive.
One of Cornbury's first acts was to forge a clause in his own com-
mission. Desiring to foster the Established Church, and finding nothing
to that effect in his instructions, he made instructions for himself. At
first the people received him with great favor. The assembly voted two
thousand pounds sterling to compensate him for the expenses of his
voyage. In order to improve and fortify the Narrows, an additional smn
of fifteen hundred pounds was granted. The money was taken out of the
treasury, but no improvement was visible at the Narrows. The repre-
sentatives modestly inquired what had become of their revenues. Lord
Cornbury replied that the assembly of New York had no right to ask
questions until the queen should give them permission. The old and
oft-repeated conflict between jjersonal despotism and popular liberty broke
out anew. The people of the province were still divided on the subject
of Leisler's insurrection. Cornbuiy became a violent partisan, favoring
the enemies and persecuting the friends of that unfortunate leader ; and so
from year to year matters grew constantly worse, until between the gov-
ernor and his people there existed no relation but that of mutual hatred.
In 1708 the civil dissensions of the province reached a climax.
Each succeeding assembly resisted more stubbornly the measures of the
governor. Time and again the people petitioned for his removal. The
councilors selected their own treasurer, refused to vote appropriations,
and curtailed Cornbury's revenues until he was impoverished and ruined.
Then came Lord Lovelace with a commission from Queen Anne, and the
passionate, wretched governor was unceremoniously tiu-ned out of office.
Left to the mercy of his injured subjects, they arrested him for debt and
threw him into prison, where he lay until, by his father's death, he be-
came a peer of England and could be no longer held in confinement.
During the progress of Queen Anne's War the troops of New York
cooperated with the army and navy of New England. Eighteen hun-
dred volunteers from the Hudson and the Delaware composed the land
forces in the unsuccessfiil expedition against Montreal in the winter of
1709-10. The provincial army proceeded as far as South River, cast
of Lake George. Here information was received that the English fleet
Avhich was expected to cooperate in the reduction of Quebec had been
sent to Portugal ; the armament of New England was insufficient of
NEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH. 181
itself to attempt the conquest of the Canadian stronghold ; and the troops
of New York and New Jersey were obliged to retreat. Again, in 1711,
when the incompetent Sir Hovenden Walker was pretending to conduct
his fleet up the St. Lawrence, and was in reality only anxious to get
away, the army which was to invade Canada by land was furnished by
New York. A second time the provincial forces reached Lake George ;
but the dispiriting news of the disaster to Walker's fleet destroyed all
hope of success, and the discouraged soldiers returned to their homes.
Failure and disgrace were not the only distressing circumstances
of these campaigns ; a heavy debt remained to overshadow the prosperity
of New York and to consume her revenues. For many years the re-
sources of the province were exhausted in meeting the extraordinary
expenses of Queen Anne's war. In 1713 the treaty of Utrecht put an
end to the conflict, and peace returned to the American colonies. In this
year the Tuscaroras of Carolina — a nation of the same race with the Iro-
quois and Hurons of the North— were defeated and driven from their
homes by the Southern colonists. The haughty tribe marched north-
ward, crossed the middle colonies and joined their warlike kinsmen on
the St. Lawrence, making the sixth nation in the Iroquois confederacy.
Nine years later a great council was held at Albany. There the grand
sachems of the Six Nations were met by the governors of New York,
Pennsylvania and Virginia. An important commercial treaty was
formed, by which the extensive and profitable fur-trade of the Indians,
which, until now, had been engrossed by the French, was diverted to the
English. In order to secure the full benefits of this arrangement, Governor
Burnett of New York hastened to establish a trading-post at Oswego, on
the southern shore of Lake Ontario. Five years later a substantial fort
was built at the same place and furnished with an English garrison. As
late as the middle of the century, Oswego continued to be the only forti-
fied outpost of the English in the entire country drained by the St. Law-
rence and its tributaries. The French, meanwhile, had built a strong fort
at Niagara, and another at Crown Point, on the western shore of Lake
ChampI lin. The struggle for colonial supremacy between the two nations
was already beginning.
The administration of Governor Cosby, who succeeded Burnett in
1732, was a stormy epoch in the history of the colony. The people were
in a constant struggle with the royal governors. At this time the contest
took the form of a dispute about the freedom of the press. The liberal
or democratic party of the province held that a public journal might criti-
cise the acts of the administration and publish views distasteful to the
p^overnment. The aristocratic party opposed such liberty as a dangerous
182 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
license, which, if permitted, would soon sap the foundations of all au-
thority. Zenger, an editor of one of the liberal newspapers, published
hostile criticisms on the policy of the governor, was seized and put in
prison. Great excitement ensued. The people were clamorous for their
champion. Andrew Hamilton, a noted lawyer of Philadelphia, went to
New York to defend Zenger, who was brought to trial in July of 1735.
The charge was libel against the government; the cause was ably argued,
and the jury made haste to bring in a verdict of acquittal. The aldermen
of the city of New York, in order to testify their appreciation of Hamil-
ton's services in the cause of liberty, made him a present of an elegant
gold box, and the people were wild with enthusiasm over their victory.
New York, like Massachusetts, Avas once visited with a fatal delu-
sion. In the year 1741 occurred what is known as the Negro Plot.
Slavery was permitted in the province, and negroes constituted a large
fraction of the population. Several destructive fires had occurred, and it
was believed that they had been kindled by incendiaries. The slaves
were naturally distrusted ; now they became feared and hated. Some
degraded women came forward and gave information that the negroes
had made a plot to burn the city, kill all who opposed them, and set up
one of their own number as governor. The whole story was the essence
of absurdity ; but the people were alarmed, and were ready to believe
anything. The reward of freedom was offered to any slave who would
reveal the plot. ]\Iany witnesses rushed forward with foolish and contra-
dictory stories ; the jails were filled with the accused ; and more than
thii*ty of the miserable creatures, with hardly the form of a trial, were
convicted and then hanged or burned to death. Others were transported
and sold as slaves in foreign lands. As soon as the su])posed peril had
passed and the excited people regained their senses, it came to be doubted
whether the whole shocking affair had not been the result of terror and
fanaticism. The verdict of after times has been that there was no plot
at all.
During the progress of King George's War the territory of New
York was several times invaded by the French and Indians. But the
invasions were feeble and easily repelled. Except the abandonment of a
few villages in the northern part of the State and the destruction of a
small amount of exposed property, little harm was done to the province.
The alliance of the fierce MohaAvks with the English always made the in-
vasion of New York by the French an exploit of more danger than profit.
The treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, concluded in 1748, again brought peace
and prosperity to the people.
Notwithstanding the central position of New York, her growth
NEW YORK UNDER THE ENGLISH. 183
was slow, her development unsteady, and her prospects darkened with
much adversity. In population she stood, at the outbreak of the
French and Indian war, but sixth in a list of the colonies. Massa-
chusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia had all
outstripped her in the race. But the elements of future renown were
nowhere else more abundantly bestowed. Here at the foot of her
principal city lay the most convenient and commodious harbor on the
Atlantic. A magnificent river— draining the country as far as where,
at Onondaga, burned the great council-fire of the Six Nations— rolled
down through fruitful valleys to join the waters of the bay. Best of
all, the people who inhabited the noble province were ever ready to
resist oppression, bold to defend their rights, and zealous in the cause
of freedom.
Such is the history of the little colony jilanted on Manhattan
Island. A hundred and thirty years have passed since the first feeble
settlements were made ; now the great valley of the Hudson is filled with
beautiful farms and teeming villages. The Walloons of Flanders and
the Puritans of New England have blended into a common people. Dis-
cord and contention, though bitter while they lasted, have borne only the
peaceful fruit of colonial liberty. There are other and greater struggles
through which New York must pass, other burdens to be borne, other
calamities to be endured, other fires in which her sons must be tried and
purified, before they gain their freedom. But the oldest and greatest of
the middle colonies has entered upon a glorious career, and the ample
foundations of an Empire State are securely laid.
COLONIAL HLSTORY.— Continued.
MINOR EASTERN COLONIES.
CHAPTER XXI.
CONNECTICUT.
THE history of Connecticut begins with the year 1630. The first
grant of the territory was made by the council of Plymouth to the
earl of Warwick ; and in March of 1631 the claim was transferred by
him to Lord Say-and-Seal, Lord Brooke, John Hampden and others.
Before a colony could be planted by the proprietors, the Dutch of New
Netherland reached the Connecticut River and built at Hartford their
fort, called the House of Good Hope. The people of New Plymouth
immediately organized and sent out a force to counteract this movement
of their rivals. The territorial claim of the Puritans extended not only
over Connecticut, but over New Netherland itself and onward to the
west. Should the intruding Dutch colonists of Manhattan be allowed
to move eastward and take possession of the finest valley in New Eng-
land? Certainly not.
The English expedition reached the mouth of the Connecticut and
sailed up the river. When the little squadron came opposite the House
of Good Hope, the commander of the garrison ordered Captain Holmes,
the English officer, to strike his colors; but the order was treated
with derision. The Dutch threatened to fire in case the fleet should attempt
to pass ; but the English defiantly hoisted sails and proceeded up the river.
The puny cannons of the House of Good Hope remained cold and silent.
At a point just below the mouth of the Farmington, seven miles above
Hartford, the Puritans landed and built the block-house of Windsor.
In October of 1635 a colony of sixty persons left Boston, traversed
the forests of Central Massachusetts, and settled at Hartford, Windsor
and Wethersfield. Earlier in the same year the younger Winthrop, a
man who in all the virtues of a noble life was a worthy riv^al of liis
(184)
CONNECTICUT. 185
father, the governor of Massachusetts, arrived in New England. He
bore a commission from the proprietors of the Western colony to build a
fort at the mouth of the Connecticut River, and to prevent the further
encroachments of the Dutch. The fortress was hastily completed and
the guns mounted just in time to prevent the entrance of a Dutch
trading-vessel which appeared at the mouth of the river. Such was the
founding of Saybrook, so named in honor of the proprietors. Lords Say-
and-Seal and Brooke. Thus was the most important river of New Eng-
land brought under the dominion of the Puritans ; the solitary Dutch
settlement at Hartford was cut off from succor and left to dwindle into
insignificance.
To the early annals of Connecticut belongs the sad story of the
Pequod War. The country west of the Thames was more thickly
peopled with savages than any other portion of New England. The
haughty and warlike Pequods were alone able to muster seven hundred
warriors. The whole effective force of the English colonists did not
amount to two hundred men. But the superior numbers of the cunning
and revengeful savages were more than balanced by the unflinching
courage and destructive weapons of the English.
The first act of violence was committed in the year 1633. The
crew of a small trading- vessel were ambushed and murdered on the banl;s
of the Connecticut. An Indian embassy went to Boston to apologize for
the crime ; the nation was forgiven and received in friendship. A treaty
was patched up, the Pequods acknowledging the supremacy of the Eng-
lish and promising to become civilized. The Narragansetts, the heredi-
tary enemies of the Pequods, had already yielded to the authority of
Massachusetts and promised obedience to her laws. A reconciliation was
thus effected between the two hostile races of savages. But as soon as the
Pequods were freed from their old fear of the Narragansetts, they began
to violate their recent treaty with the English. Oldham, the worthy
captain of a trading- vessel, was murdered near Block Island. A com-
pany of militia pursued the perpetrators of the outrage and gave them
a bloody punishment. All the slumbering hatred and suppressed rage
of the nation burst forth, and the war began in earnest.
In this juncture of affairs the Pequods attempted a piece of danger-
ous diplomacy. A persistent effort was made to induce the Narragansetts
and the Mohegans to join in a war of extermination against the English ;
and the plot was wellnigh successful. But the heroic Roger Williams,
faithful in his misfortunes, sent a letter to Sir Henry Vane, governor of
Massachusetts, warned him of the impending danger, and volunteered his
services to defeat the conspiracy. The governor replied, urging Williams
186 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
to use his utmost endeavors to thwart the threatened aUiance. Embark-
ing alone in a frail canoe, the exile left Providence, which he had founded
only a month before, and drifted out into Narragansett Bay. Every mo-
ment it seemed that the poor little boat with its lonely passenger would be
swallowed up ; but his courage and skill as an oarsman at last brought
him to the shore in safety. Proceeding at once to the house of Canonicus,
king of the Narragansetts, he found the painted and bloody ambassadors
of the Pequods already there. For three days and nights, at the deadly
peril of his life, he pleaded with Canonicus and Miantonomoh to reject
the proposals of the hostile tribe, and to stand fast in their allegiance to
the English. His noble efforts were successful; the wavering Narra-
gansetts voted to remain at peace, and the disappointed Pequod chiefs
were sent away.
The Mohegans also rejected the proposed alliance. Uncas, the
sachem of that nation, not only remained faithful to the whites, but fur-
nished a party of warriors to aid them against the Pequods. In the
meantime, repeated acts of violence had roused the colony to vengeance.
During the winter of 1636-37 many murders were committed in the
neighborhood of Saybrook. In the following April a massacre occurred
at Wethersfield, in which nine persons were butchered. On the 1st day
of May the three towns of Connecticut declared war. Sixty gallant volun-
teers— one-third of the whole effective force of the colony — were put under
command of Captain John Mason of Hartford. Seventy Mohegans joined
the expedition ; and the thoughtful Sir Henry Vane sent Captain Under-
bill with twenty soldiers from Boston.
The descent from Hartford to Saybrook occupied one day. On the
20th of the month the expedition, sailing eastward, passed the mouth of
the Thames ; here was the principal seat of the Pequod nation. When
the savages saw the squadron go by without attempting to laud, they set
up shouts of exultation, and persuaded themselves that the English were
afraid to hazard battle. But the poor natives had sadly mistaken the
men with whom they had to deal. The fleet proceeded quietly into
Narragansett Bay and anchored in the harbor of Wickford. Here the
troops landed and began their march into the country of the Pequods.
After one day's advance. Mason reached the cabin of Canonicus and
JNIiantonomoh, sachems of the Narragansetts. Them he attempted to
persuade to join him against the common enemy ; but the wary chieftains,
knowing the prowess of the Pequods, and fearing that the English might
be defeated, decided to remain. neutral.
, On the evening of the 25th of May the troops of Connecticut came
within liearing of the Pequod fort. The unsuspecting warriors spent
CONNECTICUT.
187
their last night on earth in uproar and jubilee. At two o'clock in the
morning the English soldiers rose suddenly from their places of conceal-
ment and rushed forward to the fort. A dog ran howluig among the
wigwams, and the warriors sprang to
arms, only to receive a deadly volley
from the English muskets. The fear-
less assailants leaped over the puny
palisades and began the work of
death ; but the savages rose on every
side in such numbers that Mason's
men were about to be overwhelmed.
" Burn them ! burn them !" shouted
the dauntless captain, seizing a flaming
i V ,
I Provi'leiioenvV
SCENE OF THE PEQUOB 'WAR.
mat and running to the windward of
the cabins. "Burn them!" resounded on every side; and in a few
minutes the dry wigwams were one sheet of crackling flame. The Eng-
lish and Mohegans hastily withdrew to the ramparts. The yelling savages
found themselves begirt with fire. They ran round and round like wild
beasts in a burning circus. If one of the wretched creatures burst through
the flames, it was only to meet certain death from a broadsword or a
musket-ball. The destruction was complete and awful. Only seven
warriors escaped ; seven others were made prisoners. Six hundred men,
women and children perished, nearly all of them being roasted to death
in a hideous heap. Before the rising of the sun 'the pride and glory of
the Pequods had passed away for ever. Sassacus, the grand sachem of
the tribe, escaped into the forest, fled for protection to the Mohawks, and
was murdered. Two of the English soldiers were killed and twenty
others wounded in the battle.
In the early morning three hundred Pequods, the remnant of the
nation, approached from a second fort in the neighborhood. They had
heard the tumult of battle, and supposed their friends victorious. To their
utter horror, they found their fortified town in ashes and nearly all their
proud tribe lying in one blackened pile of half-burnt flesh and bones.
The savage warriors stamped the earth, yelled and tore their hair in
desperate rage, and ran howling through the woods. Mason's men re-
turned by way of New London to Saybrook, and thence to Hartford.
New troops arrived from Massachusetts. The renmants of the hostile
nation were pursued into the swamps and thickets west of Saybrook.
Every wigwam of the Pequods was burned, and every field laid waste.
The remaining two hundred panting fugitives were hunted to death oi
captivity. Tlie prisoners were distributed as servants among the Narra-
188 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
gansetts and Mohegans ; a few were sold as slaves. The first war between
the English colonists and the natives had ended in the overthrow and
destruction of one of the most powerful tribes of New England. For
many years the other nations, when tempted to hostility, remembered the
fate of the Pequods.
The final capture of the Pequod fugitives was made at Fairfield,
on Long Island Sound, fifty miles south-west from Saybrook. The Eng-
lish thus became better acquainted with the coast west of the mouth of
the Connecticut. Some men of Boston were delighted with the beautiful
plain between the Wallingford and West Rivers. Here they tarried over
winter, building some cabins and exploring the country; such was the
founding of New Haven. Shortly afterward, a Puritan colony from
England, under the leadership of Theophilus Eaton and John Davenport,
arrived at Boston. Hearing of the beauty of the country on the somid,
the new immigrants again set sail, and about the middle of April reached
New Haven. On the morning of the first Sabbath after their arrival the
colonists assembled for worship under a spreading oak ; and Davenport,
their minister, preached a touching and appropriate sermon on The
Temptation in the Wilderness. The next care was to make an
honorable purchase of land from the Indians — a policy which was ever
afterward faithfully adhered to by the colony. For the first year there
was no government except a simple covenant, into which the settlers
entered, that all would be obedient to the rules of Scripture.
In June of 1639 the leading men of New Haven held a convention
in a barn, and formally adopted the Bible as the constitution of the State.
Everything was strictly conformed to the religious standard. The govern-
ment was called the House of Wisdom, of Avhich Eaton, Davenport and
five others were the seven Pillars. None but church members were ad-
mitted to the rights of citizenship. All offices were to be filled by the
votes of the freemen at an annual election. For twentv vears consecu-
tively, Mr. Eaton — first and greatest of the pillars — was chosen governor
of the colony. Other settlers came, and pleasant villages sprang up on
both shores of Long Island Sound.
Civil government began in Connecticut in the year 1639. Until
that time the Western colonies had been subject to Massachusetts, and
had scarcely thought of independence. But when the soldiers of Hartford
returned victorious from the Pequod war, the exulting people began to
think of a separate commonwealth. If they could fight their own battles,
could they not make their own laws? Delegates from the three towns
came together at Hartford, and on the 14th of January a constitution was
framed for the colony. The new instrument M'as one of the most simple
CONNECTICUT. 189
and liberal ever adopted. An oath of allegiance to the State was the
only qualification of citizenship. No recognition of the English king or
of any foreign authority was required. Diiferent religious opinions were
alike tolerated and respected. All the officers of the colony were to be
chosen by ballot at an annual election. The law-making power was
vested in a general assembly, and the representatives were apportioned
among the towns according to population. Neither Saybrook nor New
Haven adopted this constitution, by which the other colonies in the valley
of the Connecticut were united in a common government.
In 1 643, Connecticut became a member of the Union of New Eng-
land. Into this confederacy New Haven was also admitted ; and in the
next year Saybrook was purchased of George Fenwick, one of the pro-
prietors, and permanently annexed to Connecticut. The anticipated diffi-
culties with the Dutch of New Netherland had made the colonies of the
West anxious for a closer union with Massachusetts. The fears of the
people were not entirely quieted until 1650, when Governor Stuyvesant
met the commissioners of Connecticut at Hartford, and established the
western boundary of the province. This measure promised peace ; but in
1651 war broke out between England and Holland, and notwithstanding
the recent pledges of friendship. New England and New Netherland were
wellnigh drawn into the conflict. Stuyvesant was suspected of inciting
the Indians against the English ; a declaration of war was proposed be-
fore the delegates of the united colonies, and was only prevented from
passing by the veto of Massachusetts. Left without support, Connecticut
and New Haven next sought aid from Cromwell, who entered heartily
into the project and sent out a fleet to co-operate with the colonists in the
reduction of New Netherland. But while the western towns were busily
preparing for war, the news of peace arrived, and hostilities were happily
averted. ■
On the restoration of monarchy in England, Connecticut made
haste to recognize King Charles as rightful sovereign. It was as much
an act of sound policy as of loyal zeal. The people of the Connecticut
valley were eager for a royal charter. They had conquered the Pequods ;
they had bought the lands of the Mohegans ; they had purchased the
claims of the earl of Warwick ; it only remained to secure all these
acquisitions with a patent from the king. The infant republic selected
its best and truest man, the scholarly younger Winthrop, and sent him
as ambassador to London. He bore with him a charter which had been
carefully prepared by the authorities of Hartford ; the problem was to
induce the king to sign it.
The aged Lord Say-and-Seal, for many years the friend and bene-
190
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
factor of the colony, was noAv an important officer of the Crown. To him
Wiuthrop delivered a letter, unfolded his plans and appealed for help ;
and the appeal was not in vain. The earl of Manchester, lord chamber^
lain to the king, was induced to lend his aid. Winthrop easily obtained
an audience with the sovereign, and did not fail to show him a ring
which Charles' I. had given as a pledge of friendship to Wmthrop's
grandfather. The little token so moved the wayward monarch's feelings
^ that in a moment
of careless mag-
nanimity he signed
the colonial charter
without the alter-
ation of a letter.
Winthrop returned
to the rejoicing col-
ony, bearing a pat-
ent the most liberal
and ample ever
granted by an Eng-
lish monarch. The
power of govern-
ing themselves was
conferred on the
people without
qualification or re-
striction. Eveiy
right of sovereign-
ty and of inde-
pendence, except
the name, Avas con-
ceded to the new State. The territory included under the charter ex-
tended from the bay and river of the Narragansetts westward to the
Pacific. The people who had built the House of Wisdom at New
Haven now found themselves the unwilling subjects of the new com-
monwealth of Connecticut.
For fourteen years the excellent Winthrop was annually chosen
governor of the colony. Every year added largely to the population and
wealth of the province. The civil and religious institutions were the
freest and best in New England. Peace reigned ; the husbandman was
undisturbed in the field, the workman in his shop. Even during King
Philip's War, Connecticut was saved from invasion. Not a war-whoop
THE YOUNGER WINTHROP.
CONNECTICUT. 191
was heard, not a hamlet burned, not a life lost, within her borders. Her
soldiers made common cause with their brethren of Massachusetts and
Ehode Island; but their own homes were saved from the desolations
of war.
In July of 1675, Sir Edmund Andros, the governor of New York,
arrived with an armed sloop at the mouth of the Connecticut. Orders
were sent to Captain Bull, who commanded the fort at Saybrook, to sur-
render his post; but the brave captain replied by hoisting the flag of
England and assuring the bearer of the message that his master would
better retire. Andros, however, landed and came to a parley with the
officers of the fort. He began to read his commission, but was ordered
to stop. In vain did the arrogant magistrate insist that the dominions
of the duke of York extended from the Connecticut to the Delaware.
" Connecticut has her own charter, signed by His Gracious Majesty King
Charles II.," said Captain Bull. " Leave off your reading, or take the
consequences!" The argument prevailed, and the red-coated governor,
trembling with rage, was escorted to his boat by a company of Saybrook
militia.
In 1686, when Andros was made royal governor of New England,
Connecticut was again included in his jurisdiction. The first year of his
administration was spent in establishing his authority in Massachusetts,
Rhode Island and New Hampshire. In the following October he made
his famous visit to Hartford. On the day of his arrival he invaded the
provincial assembly while in session, seized the book of minutes, and with
his own hand wrote FiNis at the bottom of the page. He demanded the
immediate surrender of the colonial charter. Governor Treat pleaded
long and earnestly for the preservation of the precious document. Andros
was inexorable. The shades of evening fell. Joseph Wadsworth found
in the gathering darkness an opportunity to conceal the cherished parch-
ment— a deed which has made his own name and the name of a tree
immortal. Two years later, when the government of Andros was over-
thrown, Connecticut made haste to restore her liberties.
In the autumn of 1693, another attempt was made to subvert the
freedom of the colony. Fletcher, the governor of New York, went to
Hartford to assume command of the militia of the province. He bore
a commission from King William ; but by the terms of the charter the
right of commanding the troops was vested in the colony itself. The
general assembly refused to recognize the authority of Fletcher, who,
nevertheless, ordered the soldiers under arms and proceeded to read his
commission as colonel. " Beat the drums !" shouted Captain Wadsworth,
who stood at the head of the company. " Silence I" said Fletcher ; the
192 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
drums ceased, and the reading began again. "Drum! drum!" cried
Wadsworth ; and a second time tlie voice of the reader was drowned
in the uproar. " Silence ! silence !" shouted the enraged governor. The
dauntless Wadsworth stepped before the ranks and said, "Colonel
Fletcher, if I am interrupted again, I will let the sunshine through your
body in an instant." That ended the controversy. Benjamin Fletcher
thought it better to be a living governor of New York than a dead
colonel of the Connecticut militia.
" I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony."
Such were the words often ministers who, in the year 1700, assembled at
the village of Branford, a few miles east of New Haven. Each of the
worthy fathers, as he uttered the words, deposited a few volumes on the
table around which they were sitting ; such was the founding of Yale
College. In 1702 the school was formally opened at Saybrook, where
it continued for fifteen years, and was then removed to New Haven.
One of the most liberal patrons of the college was Elihu Yale, from whom
the famous institution of learning derived its name. Common schools
had existed in almost eveiy village of Connecticut since the planting
of the colony. The children of the Pilgrims have never forgotten the
cause of education.
The half century preceding the French and Indian war was a
period of prosperity to all the western districts of New England. Con-
necticut was especially favored. Almost unbroken peace reigned through-
out her borders. The ble&sings of a free commou\^'ealth were realized in
full measure. The farmer reaped his fields in cheerfulness and hope.
The mechanic made glad his dusty shop with anecdote and song. The
merchant feared no duty, the villager no taxes. Want was unknown and
pauperism unheard of. Wealth was little cared for and crime of rare
occurrence among a people with whom intelligence and virtue were the
only foundations of nobility. With fewer dark pages in her history, less
austerity of manners and greater liberality of sentiment, Connecticut had
all the lofty purposes and shining wtues of Massachusetts. The visions
of Hooker and Haynes, and the dreams of the quiet Winthrop, were more
than realized in the happy homes of the Connecticut valley.
RHODE ISLAND. 193
CHAPTER XXII-
RHODE ISLAND.
IT was in June of 1636 that the exiled Roger Williams left the country
of the Wampanoags and passed down the Seekonk to Narragansett
River. His object was to secure a safe retreat beyond the limits of Ply-
mouth colony. He, with his five companionSj landed on the western
bank, at a place called Moshassuck, purchased the soil of the Narragansett
sachems, and laid the foundations of Providence. Other exiles joined the
company. New farms were laid out, new fields were ploughed and new
houses built; here, at last, was found at Providence Plantation a
refuge for all the distressed and persecuted.
The leader of the new colony was a native of Wales ; born in 1606 ;
liberally educated at Cambridge ; the pupil of Sir Edward Coke ; in after
years the friend of Milton ; a dissenter ; a hater of ceremonies ; a disciple
of truth in its purest forms; an uncompromising advocate of freedom;
exiled to Massachusetts, and now exiled by Massachusetts, he brought
to the banks of the Narragansett the great doctrines of perfect religious
liberty and the equal rights of men. If the area of Rhode Island had
corresponded with the grandeur of the principles on which she was
founded, who could have foretold her destiny ?
Roger Williams belonged to that most radical body of dissenters
called Anabaptists. By them the validity of infant baptism was denied.
Williams himself had been baptized in infancy ; but his views in regard
to the value of the ceremony had undergone a change during his ministry
at Salem. Now that he had freed himself from all foreign authority both
of Church and State, he conceived it to be his duly to receive a second
baptism. But who should perform the ceremony ? Ezekiel Holliman,
a layman, was selected for the sacred duty. Williams meekly received
the rite at the hands of his friend, and then in turn baptized him and ten
other exiles of the colony. Such was the organization of the first
Baptist Church in America.
The beginning of civil government in Rhode Island was equally
simple and democratic. Mr. Williams was the natural ruler of the little
province, but he reserved for himself neither wealth nor privilege. The
194 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
lands which he purchased from Canonicas and Miantonomoh were freely
distributed among the colonists. Only two small fields, to be planted
and tilled with his own hands, were kept by the benevolent founder for
himself How different from the grasping avarice of Wingfield and Lord
Cornbury ! All the powers of the colonial government were entrusted to
the people. A simple agreement was made and signed by the sattlers that
in all matters not affecting the conscience they would yield a cheerful
obedience to such rules as the majority might make for the public welfare.
In questions of religion the individual conscience should be to every man
a guide. When Massachusetts objected that such a democracy would leave
nothing for the magistrates to do, Rhode Island answered that magistrates
were wellnigh useless.
The new government stood the test of experience. The evil prophe-
cies of its enemies were unfulfilled ; instead of predicted turmoil and dis-
sension. Providence Plantation had nothing l)ut peace and quiet. It w^as
found that all religious sects could live together in harmony, and that
difference of opinion was not a bar to friendship. All beliefs were avcI-
come at Narragansett Bay. A Buddhist from Japan or a pagan from
Madagascar would have been received at Providence and cordially enter-
tained. Miantonomoh, the youilg sachem of the Narragansetts, loved
Roger AVilliams as a brother. It was the confidence of this chieftain that
enabled Williams to notify Massachusetts of the Pequod conspiracy, and
then at the hazard of his life to defeat the plans of the hostile nation.
This magnanimous act awakened the old affections of his friends at Salem
and Plymouth, and an effort was made to recall him and his fellow-exiles
from banishment. It was urged that a man of such gracious abilities, so
full of patience and charity, could never be dangerous in a State; but his
enemies answered that the principles and teachings of Williams would
subvert the commonwealth and bring Massachusetts to ruin. The pro-
})osal was rejected. The ancient Greeks sometimes recalled their exiled
heroes from banishment ; the colony of Massachusetts, never.
During the Pequod war of 1637, Rhode Island was protected by the
friendly Narragansetts. The territory of this powerful tribe lay between
Providence and the country of the Pequods, and there was little fear of
an inviision. The next year was noted for the arrival of Mrs. Hutchinson
and her friends at the island of Rhode Island. The leaders of the com-
pany were John Clarke and William Coddington. It had been their
intention to conduct the colony to Long Island, or perhaps to the country
of the Delaware. But Roger Williams made haste to welcome them
to his province, where no man's conscience might be distressed. Gov-
ernor Vane of Massachusetts, sympathizing with the refugees, prevailed
RHODE ISLAND.
195
with Miantonomoh to make thera a gift of Rhode Island. Here, in the
early spring of 1638, the colony was planted. The first settlement was
made at Portsmouth, in the _^.^^,_ ^^-.^^^^ - ^^b^s^ ^ _-
northern part of the island, ^j, ==^„^.,^..,
Other exiles came to join their :;
friends, and civil government
was thought desirable. The
Jev/ish nation furnished tliei
model. William Coddington
was chosen judge in the new
Israel of Narragansett Bay,
and three elders were ap-
pointed to assist him in the
government. In the follow-
ing year the title of judgo
gave way to that of governor,
and the administration be-
came more modern in its
methods. At the same time
a party of colonists removed
from Portsmouth, already
crowded with exiles, to the
south-western part of the island, and laid the foundations of Newport.
Hither had come, more than six hundred years before, the hardy adven-
turei's of Iceland. Here had been a favorite haunt of the wayward sea-
kings of the eleventh century. Plere, in sight of the new settlement,
stood the old stone tower, the most celebrated monument left by the
Norsemen in America.
* The island was soon peopled. The want of civil government began
to be felt as a serious inconvenience. Mr. Coddington's new Israel had
proved an utter failure. In March of 1641 a public meeting was con-
vened ; the citizens came together on terms of perfect equality, and the
task of framing a constitution was undertaken. In three days the instru-
ment was completed. The government was declared to be a "Demo-
CRACIE," or government by the people. The supreme authority was
lodged with the whole body of freemen in the island ; and freemen, in
this instance, meant everybody. The vote of the majority should always
rule. No soul should be distressed on accoun of religious doctrine.
Liberty of conscience, even in the smallest particular, should be uni-
versally respected. A seal of State was ordered, having for its design
a sheaf of arrows and a motto of Amor vincet omnia. The little
THE OLD STONE TOWER AT NEWPORT.
196 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
republic of Narragansett Bay was named the Plantation of Rhode
Island.
In 1643 was formed the Union of New England. Providence and
Ehode Island both pleaded for admission, and both were rejected. The
meauino- of this illiberal action on the part of the older and more power-
ful colonies was that the settlements on the Narragansett belonged to the
jurisdiction of Plymouth. Alarmed at the prospect of being again put
under the dominion of their persecutors, the exiled republicans of Rhode
Island determined to appeal to the English government for a charter.
Roo-er Williams was accordingly appointed agent of the two plantations
and sent to London. He was cordially received by his old and steadfast
friend Sir Henry Vane, now an influential member of Parliament. The
plea of Rhode Island was heard with favor; and on the 14th of March
in the following year the coveted charter was granted. Great was the
rejoicing when the successful ambassador returned to his people. The
grateful colonists met their benefactor at Seekouk, and conducted him to
Providence with shouts and exultation. Rhode Island had secm-ed her
independence.
The first general assembly of the province was convened at Ports-
mouth, in 1647. The new government was organized in strict accordance
Avith the provisions of the charter. A code of laws was framed; the
principles of democracy were reaffirmed, and full religious toleration and
freedom of conscience guaranteed to all. A president and subordinate
officers were chosen, and Rhode Island began her career as an independent
colony.
Once the integrity of the province was endangxirad. In 1651,
William Coddington, who had never been satisfied with the failure of his
Jewish commouAvealth, succeeded in obtaining from the English council
of state a decree by which the island of Rhode Island was separated from
the common government. But the zealous protests of John Clarke and
Roger Williams, who went a second time to London, prevented the dis-
union, and the decree of separation was revoked. The grateful people
now desired that their magnanimous benefactor should be commissioned
by the English council as governor of the province ; but the blind grat-
itude of his friends could not prevail over the wisdom of the prudent
leader. He foresaw the danger, and refused the tempting commissioa.
Roger Williams was proof against all the seductions of ambition.
The faithful Clarke remained in England to guard the interests of
the colony. It was not long until his services were greatly needed. The
restoration of monarchy occurred in 1660. Charles II. came home in
triumph fi-om his long exile. Rhode Island had accepted a charter from
RHODE ISLAND. 197
the Long Parliament ; that Parliament had driven Charles I. from his
throne, had made war upon him, beaten him in battle, imprisoned him,
beheaded him. Was it likely that the son of that monarch would allow a
colonial charter issued by the Long Parliament to stand ? Would he not
with vindictive scorn dash the patent of the little republic out of exist-
ence ? The people of Rhode Island had hardly the courage to plead for the
preservation of their liberty ; but taking heart, they wrote a loyal petition
to the new sovei'cign, praying for the renewal of their charter. To their in-
finite delight, and to the wonder of after times, the king listened with favor ;
Clarendon, the minister, assented; and on the 8th of July, 1663, the
charter was reissued. The freedom of the colony was in no wise restricted.
All the liberal provisions of the parliamentary patent were revived. Not
even an oath of allegiance was requu'ed of the people.
On the 24th of November the island of Rhode Island was thronged
with people. George Baxter had come with the charter. Opening the
box that contained it, he held aloft the precious parchment. There, sure
enough, was the signature of King Charles II. There was His Majesty's
royal stamp ; there was the broad seal of England. The charter was read
aloud to the joyful people. The little "democracie" of Rhode Island
was safe. The happy colonists were not to blame when they began their
letter of thanks as follows: "To King Charles of England, for his high
and inestimable — ^yea, incomparable — favor."
For nearly a quarter of a century Rhode Island prospered. The
distresses of King Philip's War were forgotten. Roger Williams grew
old and died. At last came Sir Edmund Andros, the enemy of New
England. After overthrowing the liberties of Massachusetts, he next
demanded the surrender of the charter of Rhode Island. The demand
was for a while evaded by Governor Walter Clarke and the colonial as-
sembly. But Andros, not to be thwarted, repaired to Newport, dissolved
the government and broke the seal of the colony. Five irresponsible
councilors were appointed to control the affairs of the province, and the
commonwealth was in ruins.
But the usurpation was as brief as it was shameful. In the spring
of 1689 the news was borne to Rhode Island that James II. had abdi-
cated the throne of England, and that Andros and his officers were pris-
oners at Boston. On May-day the people rushed to Newport and made
a proclamation of their gratitude for the great deliverance. Walter Clarke
was reelected governor, but was fearful of accepting. Almy was elected,
and also declined. Then an old Quaker, named Henry Bull, more than
eighty years of age, was chosen. He was one of the founders of the colony.
He had known Anne Hutchinson and Roger Williams. Should he, in
198 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
his gray hairs, through fear and timidity, refuse the post of danger? The
old veteran accepted the trust, and spent his last days in restoring the
liberties of Rhode Island.
Again the little State around the Bay of Narragansett was pros-
perous. For more than fifty years the peace of the colony was undis-
turbed. The principles of the illustrious founder became the principles
of the commonwealth. The renown of Rhode Island has not been in
vastness of territory, in mighty cities or victorious armies, but in a stead-
fast devotion to truth, justice and freedom.
CHAPTER XXIII.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
IN the year 1622 the territory lying between the rivers Merrimac and
Kennebec, reaching from the sea to the St. Lawrence, was granted
by the council of Plymouth to Sir Ferdinand Gorges and John Mason.
The history' of New Hampshire begins with the folloMing year. For the
proprietors made haste to secure their new domain by actual settlements.
In the early spring of 1623 two small companies of colonists were sent
out by Mason and Gorges to people their province. The coast of New
Hampshire had first been visited by Martin Pring in 1603. Eleven
years later the restless Captain Smith explored the spacious harbor at
the mouth of the Piscataqua, and spoke with delight of the deep and
tranquil waters.
One party of the new immigrants landed at Little Harbor, two
miles south of the present site of Portsmouth, and began to build a village.
The other party proceeded up stream, entered the Cocheco, and, four miles
above the mouth of that tributary, laid the foundations of Dover. With
the exception of Plymouth and "Weymouth, Portsmouth and Dover are
tJie oldest towns in New England. But the progress of the settlements
was slow; for many years the two villages were only fishing-stations.
In 1629 the proprietors divided their dominions. Gorges retaining the
part north of the Piscataqua, and ]\Iason taking exclusive control of the
district between the Piscataqua and the Merrimac. In May of this ^-oar,
Rev. John Wheelwright, wlio soon afterward ])eoame a leader in the party
of Anne Hutchinson, visited the Abenaki chieftains, and purchased their
NEW HAMPSHIRE. 199
claims to the soil of the whole territory held by Mason ; but in the fol-
lowing November, Mason's title was confirmed by a second patent from
the council, and the name of the province was changed from Laconia to
New Hampshire. Very soon Massachusetts began to urge her chartered
rights to the district north of the Merrimac ; already the claims to the
jurisdiction of the new colony were numerous and conflicting.
In November of 1635, Mason died, and his widow undertook the
government of the province. But the expenses of the colony were greater
than the revenues ; the chief tenants could not be paid for their services ;
and after a few years of mismanagement the territory was given up to the
servants and dependents of the late proprietor. Such was the condition
of affairs when Mrs. Hutchinson and her friends were banished from
Boston. "Wheelwright, who was of the number, now found use for the
lands which he had purchased in New Hampshire. When Clarke and
Coddington, leading the greater number of the exiles, set out for Rhode
Island, Wheelwright, with a small party of friends, repaired to the banks
of the Piscataqua. At the head of tide-water on that stream they halted,
and founded the village of Exeter. The little colony was declared a
republic, established on the principle of equal right and universal toler-
ation.
The proposition to unite New Hampshire with Massachusetts was
received with favor by the jDeople of both colonies. The liberal provisions
of the Body of Liberties, adopted by the older province in 1641, excited
the villagers of the Piscataqua, and made them anxious to join the desti-
nies of the free commonwealth of Massachusetts. A union was immedi-
ately proposed; on the 14th of the following April terms of consolidation
were agreed on, and New Hampshire, by the act of her own people, was
united with the older colony. It is worthy of special notice that the law
of Massachusetts restricting the rights of citizenship to church members
was not extended over the new province. The people of Portsmouth and
Dover belonged to the Church of England, and it was deemed unjust to
discriminate against them on account of their religion. New Hampshire
was the only colony east of the Hudson not originally founded by the
Puritans.
The union continued in force until 1679. In the mean time tht
heirs of Mason had revived the claim of the old proprietor of the province.
The cause had been duly investigated in the courts of England, and in
1677 a decision was reached that the Masonian claims were invalid as to
the civil jurisdiction of New Hampshire, but valid as to the soil — ^that is, the
heirs were the lawful owners, but not the lawful governors, of the territory.
It was evident from the character of this decision that King Charles in-
200 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
tended to assert his own right of government over New Hampshire, and
at the same time to confer the ownership of the soil upon the represent-
atives of Mason. Nor was the province long left in doubt as to the king's
intentions. On the 24th of July, 1679, a decree was published by which
New Hampshire was separated from the jurisdiction of Massachusetts and
organized as a distinct royal province. The excuse was that the claims
of the Masons against the farmers of New Hampshire would have to be
determined in colonial courts, and that colonial courts could not be estab-
lished without the organization of a separate colony. It was clearly fore-
seen that in such trials the courts of Massachusetts would always decide
against the Masons. The purpose of the king became still more apparent
when Robert Mason, himself the largest claimant of all, was allowed to
nominate a governor for the province : Edward Cranfield was selected for
that office.
The people of New Hampshire were greatly excited by the tlireatened
destruction of their liberties. Before Cranfield's arrival the rugged saw-
yers and lumbermen of the Piscataqua had convened a general assembly
at Portsmouth. The first resolution which was passed by the represent-
atives showed the spirit of colonial resistance in full force. ^' No act, im-
position, law or ordinance," said the sturdy legislators, " shall be valid
unless made by the assembly and approved by the people." When the
indignant king heard of this resolution, he declared it to be both Avicked
and absurd. It was not the first time that a monarch and his people had
disagreed.
In November of 1682, Cranfield dismissed the popular assembly.
Such a despotic act had never before been attempted in New England.
The excitement ran high ; the governor was openly denounced, and his
claims for rents and forfeitures were stubbornly resisted. At Exeter the
sheriff was beaten with clubs. The farmei-s' wives met the tax-gatherers
with pailfulls of hot water. At the ^'illage of Hampton, Cranfield's
deputy was led out of town with a rope round his neck. When the
governor ordered out the militia, not a man obeyed the summons. It was
in the midst of these broils that Cranfield, unable to collect his rents and
vexed out of his wits, wrote to England begging for the privilege of going
home. The " unreasonable" people who were all the time caviling at his
commission and denying his authority were at length freed from his
presence.
An effort Avas now made to restore New Hampshire to the jurisdiction
of Massachusetts ; but before this could be done the charter of the latter
province had been taken away and Edmund Andros ap])ointed governor
of all New England. The colonies north of the Merrimac, seeing that
JS\tJiV HAMPSHIRE. 201
even Massachusetts had been brought to submission, offered no resistance
to Andros, but quietly yielded to his authority. Until the English revo-
lution of 1688, and the consequent downfall of Andros, New Hampshire
remained under the dominion of the royal governor. But when he was
seized and imprisoned by the citizens of Boston, the people of the northern
towns also rose in rebellion and reasserted their freedom. A general as-
sembly was convened at Portsmouth in the spring of 1690, and an ordi-
nance was at once passed reannexing New Hampshire to Massachusetts.
But in August of 1692 this action was annulled by the English govern-
ment, and the two provinces were a second time separated against the
protests of the people. In 1698, when the earl of Bellomont came out as
royal governor of New York, his commission was made to include both
Massachusetts and New Hampshire. For a period of forty-two years the
two provinces, though retaining their separate legislative assemblies, con-
tinued under the authority of a common executive. Not until 1741 was
a final separation effected between the colonies north and south of the
Merrimac.
Meanwhile, the heirs of Mason, embarrassed with delays and vexed
by opposing claimants, had sold to Samuel Allen, of London, their title
to New Hampshire. To him, in 1691, the old Masonian patent was
transferred. His son-in-law, named Usher, a land speculator of Boston,
was appointed deputy governor. The new proprietor made a long and
futile effort to enforce his claim to the lands of the province, but was every-
where resisted. Lawsuits were begun in the colonial courts, but no
judgments could be obtained against the occupants of lands ; all efforts to
drive the farmers into the payment of rents or the surrender of their
homes were unavailing. For many years the history of New Hampshire
contains little else than a record of strife and contention. Finally, Allen
died; and in 1715, after a struggle of a quarter of a century, his heirs
abandoned their claim in despair. A few years afterward one of the de-
scendants of Mason discovered that the deed which his kinsmen had made
to Allen was defective. The original Masonian patent was accordingly
revived, and a last effort was made to secure possession of the province,
but was all in vain. The colonial government had now groAvn stroncj
enough to defend the rights of its people, and the younger Masons were
obliged to abandon their pretensions. In the final adjustment of this
long-standing difficulty the colonial authorities allowed the validity of
the Masonian patent as to the unoccupied portions of the territory, and
the heirs made a formal surrender of their claims to all the rest.
Of all the New England colonies, New Hampshire suffered most
from the French and Indian Wars. Her settlements were feeble, and her
202 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
territory most exposed to savage invasion. In the last year of King
Philip's War the suffering along the frontier of the province was very
great. Again, in the wars of William, Anne and George, the villages of
the northern colony were visited with devastation and ruin. But in the
intervals of peace the spirits of the people revived, and the hardy settlers
returned to their wasted farms to begin anew the struggle of life. Out
of these conflicts and trials came that sturdy and resolute race of pioneers
who bore such a heroic part in the greater contests of after years.
Such is the story of the planting, progress, and development of
New England. Hither had come, in the beginning, a people of sober
habits, frugal lives, and lofty purposes. Before their imagination was
one vision — the vision of freedom. And freedom to the men who laid
the foundations of civilization in New England meant the breaking off
of every species of thralldom. These people came to the New World
to stay. They voluntarily chose the wilderness with its forests, and
snows, and savages. For forests, and snows, and savages were better
than luxury with despotism. In Virginia as late as the middle of the
eighteenth century many of the planters still looked fondly across the
ocean and spoke of England as their " home." Not so with the peo-
ple whose hamlets were scattered from the Penobscot to the Housa-
tonic. With them the humble cabin in the frozen woods under the
desolate sky of winter was a cheerful and sunny "home" — if only
Freedom was written on the threshold.
COLONIAL HISTORY.— Continued.
MINOR MIDDLE COLONIES.
CHAPTER XXIY.
NEW JERSEY.
THE colonial history of New Jersey properly begins with the found-
ing of Elizabethtown, in 1664. As early as 1618 a feeble trading
station had been established at Bergen, west of the Hudson ; but forty
years elapsed before permanent dwellings were built in that neigh-
borhood. In 1623 the block-house, called Fort Nassau, was erected
at the mouth of Timber Creek, on the Delaware ; after a few months'
occupancy. May and his companions abandoned the place and returned
to New Amsterdam. Six years later the southern part of the present
State of New Jersey was granted to Godyn and Blomaert, two of the
Dutch patroons; but no settlement was made. In 1634 there was
not a single European living between Delaware Bay and the fortieth
degree of latitude. In 1651 a considerable district, including the site
of Elizabethtown, was purchased by Augustine Herman ; but still no
colony was planted. Seven years afterwards a larger grant, embracing
the old trading house at Bergen, was made; and in 1663 a company
of Puritans, living on Long Island, obtained permission of Governor
Stuyvesant to settle on the banks of the Raritan ; but no settlement
was effected until after the conquest.
All the territory of New Jersey was included in the grant made by
King Charles to his brother the duke of York. Two months before the
conquest of New Netherland by the English, that portion of the duke's
province lying between the Hudson and the Delaware, extending as far
north as forty-one degrees and forty minutes, was assigned by the proprietor
to Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. These noblemen were already
proprietors of Carolina ; but they had adhered to the king's cause during
the civil war in England, and were now rewarded with a second Amer-
ican province. Almost immediately after the conquest another company
of Puritans made application to Governor Nicolls, and received an exten-
sive grant of land on Newark Bay. The Indian titles were honorably
(203j
204 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
purchased; in the following October a village was begun and named
Elizabethtown, in honor of Lady Carteret.
In August of 1665, Philip Carteret, son of Sir George, arrived as
governor of the province. At first he was violently opposed by Nicolls
of NcAV York, who refused to believe that the duke had divided his terri-
tory. But Carteret was armed with a commission, and could not be pre-
vented from taking possession of the new settlements below the Hudson.
Elizabethtown was made the capital of the colony ; other immigrants
arrived from Long Island and settled on the banks of the Passaic ; New-
ark w^as founded ; flourishing hamlets appeared on the shores of the bay
as far south as Sandy Hook. In honor of Sir George Carteret, who had
been governor of the Isle of Jersey, in the English Channel, his American
domain w^as named New Jersey.
Experience had taught the proprietors wisdom ; "they had learned
that freedom is essential to the prosperity of a colony, and that liberal
concessions to the people are better than great outlays of money. Berke-
ley and Carteret, though royalists themselves, provided for their new State
an excellent constitution. Person and property were put under the protec-
tion of law. The government was made to consist of a governor, a council
and a popular legislative assembly. There should be no taxation unless
levied by the representatives of the people. Difference of opinion should
be respected, and freedom of conscience guaranteed to every citizen. The
proprietors reserved to themselves only the right of annulling objection-
able acts of the assembly and of appointing the governor and colonial
judges. The lauds of the province were distributed to the settlers foi- a
quit-rent of a half penny per acre, not to be paid until 1670.
In 1668 the first general assembly convened at Elizabethtown.
Nearly all the representatives were Puritans, and the laws and customs
of New England were thus early impressed on the legislation of the
colony. Affairs went well until 1670, when the half-penny quit-rents M'ere
due to the proprietors. The colonists, in the mean time, had purchased
their lands of the Indians, and also of Governor Nicolls of New York,
who still claimed New Jersey as a part of his province. To the settlers,
therefore, it seemed that their titles to their farms were good with(xit
further payment to Philip Carteret or anybody else. The collection of
the rents was accordingly resisted ; and the colony became a scene first of
strife and tlien of revolution. In May of 1672 the colonial assembly
convened and deposed the governor from office. James Carteret, another
son of Sir George, was chosen governor, and Philip returned to England.
In 1673 the Dutch succeeded in retaking New York from the Eng-
lish. For a few months the old province of New Netherland, including
NEW JERSEY.
205
the country as far south as the Delaware, was restored to Holland. But
in the next year the whole territory was re-ceded by the states-general to
England. The duke of York now received from his brother, the king,
a second patent for the country between the Connecticut and the Delaware,
and at the same time confirmed his former grant of New Jersey to Berke-
ley and Carteret. Then, in utter disregard of the rights of the two pro=
prietors, the duke appointed Sir Edmund Andros as royal governor of
the whole province. Carteret determined to defend his claim against the
authority of Andros ; but Lord Berkeley, disgusted with the duke's vacil-
lation and dishonesty, sold his interest in New Jersey to John Eenwick,
to be held in trust for Edward Byllinge.
In 1675, Philip Carteret returned to America and resumed the
government of the province from which he had been expelled. Andros
opposed him in every act ; claimed
New Jersey as a part of his own
dominions; kept the colony in an
uproar; compelled the ships which
came a-trading with the new settle-
ments to pay tribute at New York ;
and finally arrested Carteret and
brought him to his own capital for
trial. Meanwhile, Byllinge became
embarrassed with debt, and was forced
to make an assignment of his property.
Gawen Laurie, Nicholas Lucas and
William Penn were appointed trus-
tees, and to them Byllinge's interest
in New Jersey was assigned for the
benefit of his creditors.
The assignees were Quakers.
Here, then, was an opportunity to
establish another asylum for the
persecuted, and to found a common-
wealth of Friends. Penn and his
associates at once applied to Sir
George Carteret for a division of the
province. That nobleman was both
willing and anxious to enter into an
arrangement by which his own half
of the territor}^ could be freed from all encumbrance. It was accordingly-
agreed to divide New Jersey so that Carteret's district should be separated
EAST AND WEST JERSEY, 1677.
206 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
from the domain of the Quakers. After much discussion an agreement
was reached in the summer of 1676, and a line of division was drawn
through the province as follows : Beginning at the southern point of
land on the east side of Little Egg Harbor, and running north of north-
west to a point on the river Delaware in the latitude of forty-one degrees
and forty minutes. The territory lying east of this line remained to
Sir George as sole proprietor, and was named East Jersey ; while that
portion lying between the line and the Delaware was called West
Jersey, and passed under the exclusive control of Penn and his asso-
ciates as assignees of Byllinge.
Early in the following March the Quaker proprietors completed and
published a body of laws under the singular title of Concessions. But
the name was significant, for everything was conceded to the people.
This first simple code enacted by the Friends in America rivaled the
charter of Connecticut in the liberality and purity of its principles. The
authors of the instrument accompanied its publication with a general
letter addressed to the Quakers of England, recommending the province
and invitino; immio;ration.
The invitation was not in vain. Before the end of the year a
colony of more than four hundred Friends arrived in the Delaware, and
found homes in West Jersey. Only one circumstance clouded the pros-
pects of the new commonwealth of peace. The agent of Andros, governor
of New York, was stationed at New Castle, on the western bank of the
Delaware, to command the entrance to the river. The Quaker shi{is
were obliged to pay customs before proceeding to their destination. A
powerful remonstrance was drawn up by the Friends and sent to Eng-
land. For once the duke of York listened to reason and agreed to sub-
mit his cause to the courts; and for once a decision was rendered in
accordance with right and justice. The eminent jurist Sir William
Jones decided that the duke had no legal right to collect duties and taxes
in the country of the Delaware. All claims to the territory and govern-
ment of West Jersey were accordingly withdrawn ; and the Quaker col-
onists were left in the enjoyment of independence. The heirs of Sir
George Carteret were quick to see that the same decision would free their
half of the province from the jurisdiction of Andros, An effort was
accordingly made by the proprietors of East Jersey to secure a deed of
release from the duke of York. The petition Avas favorably entertained,
the deed issued and the whole territory between the Hudson and the
Delaware freed from foreign authority.
In November of 1681, Jennings, the deputy-governor of West
Jersey, convened the first general assembly of the province. The men
NEW JERSEY. 207
who had so worried the aristocracy of England by wearing their hats in
the presence of great men, and by saying Thee and TTiou, now met together
to make their own laws. The code was brief and simple. The doctrines
of the Concessions were reaffirmed. Men of all races and of all religions
were declared to be equal before the law. No superiority was conceded
to rank or title, to wealth or royal birth. Imprisonment for debt was
forbidden. The sale of ardent spirits to the Red men was prohibited.
Taxes sliould be voted by the representatives of the people. The lands
of the Indians should be acquired by honorable purchase. Finally, a
criminal — unless a murderer, a traitor or a thief — might be pardoned by
the person against whom the offence was committed.
In 1682, William Penn and eleven other Friends purchased of the
heirs of Carteret the province of East Jersey. Robert Barclay, an em-
inent Quaker of Aberdeen, in Scotland, and author of the book called
Barclay's Apology, was appointed governor for life. The whole of New
Jersey was now under the authority of the Friends. The administration
of Barclay, which continued until his death, in 1690, was chiefly noted
for a large immigration of Scotch Quakers who left the governor's native
country to find freedom in East Jersey. The persecuted Presbyterians of
Scotland came to the province in still greater numbers.
On the accession of James II., in 1685, the American colonies from
Maine to Delaware were consolidated, and Edmund Andros appointed
royal governor. His first year in America was spent in establishing his
authority at Boston, Providence and HartforiJ. Not until 1688 were
New York and the two Jerseys brought under his jurisdiction. The
short reign of King James was already at an end before Andros could
succeed in setting up a despotism on the ruin of colonial liberty. When
the news came of the abdication and flight of the English monarch, the
governor of New England could do nothing but surrender to the indig-
nant people whom he had wronged and insulted. His arrest and im-
prisonment was the signal for the restoration of popular government in all
the colonies over which he had ruled.
But the condition of New Jersey was deplorable. It was almost
impossible to tell to whom the jurisdiction of the territory rightfully be-
longed. So far as the eastern province was concerned, the representatives
of Carteret claimed it ; the governor of New York claimed it ; Penn and
his associates claimed it. As to the western province, the heirs of Byllinge
claimed it ; Lucas, Laurie and Penn claimed it ; the governor of New
York claimed it. Over all these pretensions stood the paramount claim
of the English king. From 1689 to 1692 there Avas no settled form of
government in the territory ; and for ten years thereafter the colony was
208 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
vexed and distracted with the presence of more rulers than any one
province could accommodate.
At last self-interest solved the problem. The proprietors came to
see that a peaceable possession of the soil of the Jerseys was worth more
than the uncertain honors of government. A proposition was accordingly
made that all the claimants should surrender their rights of civil jurisdic-
tion to the English Crown, retaming only the ownership of the soil. The
measure was successfully carried out; and in April of 1702, all propri-
etary claims being waived in favor of the sovereign, the territory between
the Hudson and the Delaware became a royal province.
New Jersey was now attached to the government of Lord Corn-
bury of New York. The union of the two colonies, however, extended
only to the office of chief magistrate ; each province retained its own legis-
lative assembly and a distinct territorial organization. This method of
government continued for thirty-six years, and was then terminated by
the action of the people. In 1728 the representatives of New Jersey sent
a petition to George II., praying for a separation of the two colonies ; but
the application was at first refused. Ten years later the petition was
renewed, and through the influence of Lewis Morris brought to a success-
ful issue. New Jersey was made independent, and Morris himself received
a commission as first royal governor of the separated province.
The people of New Jersey were but little disturbed by the succes-
sive Indian wars. The native tribes on this part of the American coast
were weak and timid. Had it not been for the cruelties of Kieft and the
wrongs of other governors of New York, the peace of the middle colonies
would never have been broken. The province of New Jersey is specially
interesting as being the point where the civilization of New England met
and blended with the civilization of the South. Here the institutions,
manners and laws of the Pilgrims were first modified by contact with the
less rigid habits and opinions of the people who came with Gosnold and
Smith. The dividing line between East and West Jersey is also the
dividing line between the austere Puritans of Massachusetts and the
chivalrous cavaliers of Virginia. Happily, along this dividing line the
men of peace, the followers of Penn and Barclay, came and dwelt as if
to subdue ill-will and make a Union possible.
PENNS YL VANIA. 209
CHAPTER XXV.
PENNSYLVANIA.
THE Quakers were greatly encouraged with the success of their col*
onies in West New Jersey. The prospect of establishing on the
banks of the Delaware a free State, founded on the principle of universal
brotherhood, kindled a new enthusiasm in the mind of William Penn.
For more than a quarter of a century the Friends had been buffeted with
shameful persecutions. Imprisonment, exile and proscription had been
their constant portion, but had not sufficed to abate their zeal or to
quench their hopes of the future. The lofty purpose and philanthropic
spirit of Penn urged him to find for his afflicted people an asylum of rest.
In June of 1680 he went boldly to King Charles, and petitioned for a
grant of territory and the privilege of founding a Quaker commonwealth
in the New World.
The petition was seconded by powerful friends in Parliament.
Lords North and Halifax and the earl of Sunderland favored the propo-
sition, and the duke of York remembered a pledge of assistance which he
had given to Penn's father. On the 5th of March, 1681, a charter was
granted ; the great seal of England, with the signature of Charles II., was
affixed ; and William Penn became the proprietor of Pennsylvania.
The vast domain embraced under the new patent was bounded on the
east by the river Delaware, extended north and south over three degrees
of latitude, and westward through five degrees of longitude. Only the
three counties comprising the present State of Delaware were reserved for
the duke of York.
In consideration of this grant, Penn relinquished a claim of sixteen
thousand pounds sterling which the British government owed to his
father's estate. He declared that his objects were to found a free com-
monwealth without respect to the color, race or religion of the inhabitants;
to subdue the natives with no other weapons than love and justice ; to
establish a refuge for the people of his own faith; and to enlarge the
borders of the British empire. One of the first acts of the great propri-
etor was to address a letter to the Swedes who might be included within
14
210 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the limits of his province, telling tliem to be of good cheer, to keep their
homes, make their own laws and fear no oppression.
Within a month from the date of his charter, Penn published to the
English nation a glowing account of his new country beyond the Del-
aware, praising the beauty of the scenery and salubrity of the climate,
promising freedom of conscience and equal rights, and inviting emigra-
tion. There was an immediate and hearty response. In the course of
the summer three shiploads of Quaker emigrants left England for the
land of promise. William Markham, agent of the proprietor, came as
leader of the company and deputy-governor of the province. He was
instructed by Penn to rule in accordance with law, to deal justly with all
men, and especially to make a league of friendship with the Indians. In
October of the same year the anxious proprietor sent a letter directly to
the natives of the territory, assuring them of his honest purposes and
brotherly affection.
The next care of Penn was to draw up a frame of government for
his province. Herein was his great temptation. He had almost ex-
hausted his father's estate in aiding the persecuted Quakers. A stated
revenue would be very necessary in conducting his administration. His
proprietary rights under the charter were so ample that he might easily
reserve for himself large prerogatives and great emoluments in the govern-
ment. He had before him the option of being a consistent, honest
Quaker or a politic, wealthy governor. He chose like a man ; right
triumphed over riches. The constitution which he framed was liberal
almost to a fault ; and the people were allowed to adopt or reject it as
they might deem proper.
In the mean time, the duke of York had been induced to surrender
his claim to the three reserved counties on the Delaware. The whole
country on the western bank of the bay and river, from the open ocean
below Cape Henlopen to the forty-third degree of north latitude, was now
under the dominion of Penn. The summer of 1682 was spent in
fiirther preparation. The proprietor wrote a touching letter of farewell
to the Friends in England ; gathered a large company of emigrants ; em-
barked for America ; and on the 27th of October landed at New Castle,
where the people were waiting to receive him.
William Penn, the founder of Philadelphia, was born on the 14th
of October, 1644. He was the oldest son of Vice- Admiral Sir William
Penn of the British navy. At the age of twelve he was sent to the
University of Oxford, where he distinguished himself as a student until
he was expelled on account of his religious opinions. Afterward he
traveled on the Continent ; was again a student at Saumur ; returned to
PENNSYLVANIA.
211
Study law at London; went to Ireland; became a soldier; heard the
preaching of Loe and was converted to the Quaker faith. His disap-
pointed and angry
father drove him
out of doors, but
he was not to be
turned from his
course. He pub-
licly proclaimed
the doctrines of the
Friends ; was ar-
rested and impris-
oned for nine
months in the Tow-
er of London. Be-
ing released, he re-
peated the offence,
and lay for half a
year in a dungeon
at Newgate. A
second time liber-
ated, but despair-
ing of toleration for
his people in Eng-
land, he cast his
gaze across the Atlantic. West Jersey was purchased ; but the boundary
was narrow, and" the great-souled proprietor sought a grander and more
beautiful domain. His petition was heard with favor and the charter of
Pennsylvania granted by King Charles. Colonists came teeming ; and
now the Quaker king himself, without pomp or parade, without the dis-
charge of cannon or vainglorious ceremony, was come to New Castle to
found a government on the basis of fraternity and peace. It was fitting
that he should call the new republic a holy experiment.
As soon as the landing was effected, Penn delivered an affectionate
and cheerful address to the crowd of Swedes, Dutch and English who
came to greet him. His former pledges of a liberal and just government
were publicly renewed, and the people were exhorted to sobriety and
honesty. From New Castle the governor ascended the Delaware to Ches-
ter ; passed the site of Philadelphia ; visited the settlements of West New
Jersey ; and thence traversed East Jersey to Long Island and New York.
After spending some time at the capital of his friend, the duke of York,
WILLIAM PENN.
212 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and speaking words of cheer to the Quakers about Brooklyn, he returned
to his own province and began his duties as chief magistrate.
Markham, the deputy-governor, had been instructed to estabHsh
fraternal relations with the Indians. Before Penn's arrival treaties had
been made, lands purchased, and pledges of friendship given between the
Friends and the Red men. Now a great conference was aj^pointed with the
native chiefs. All the sachems of the Lenni Lenapes and other neighbor-
ing tribes were invited to assemble. The council was held on the banks
of the Delaware under the open sky. Penn, accompanied by a few un-
armed friends, clad in the simple garb of the Quakers, came to the ap-
pointed spot and took his station under a venerable elm, now leafless ; for
it was winter. The chieftains, also unarmed, sat, after the manner of
their race, in a semicircle on the ground. It was not Penn's object to
purchase lands, to provide for the interests of trade or to make a formal
treaty, but rather to assure the untutored children of the woods of his
honest purposes and brotherly affection. Standing before them with
grave demeanor and speaking by an interpreter, he said : " My Friends :
We have met on the broad pathway of good faith. We are all one flesh
and blood. Being brethren, no advantage shall be taken on either side.
AVhen disputes arise, we will settle them in council. Between us there
shall be nothing but openness and love." The chiefs replied : " While
the rivers run and the sun shines we will live in peace with the children
of William Penn."
No record was made of the treaty, for none was needed. Its terms
were written, not on decaying parchment, but on the living hearts of
men. No deed ol violence or injustice ever marred the sacred covenant.
The Indians vied with the Quakers in keeping unbroken the pledge of
perpetual peace. For mo" , than seventy years during which the province
remained under the control of the Friends, not a single war-whoop was
lieard within the borders of Pennsylvania. The Quaker hat and coat
proved to be a better defence for the wearer than coat-of-mail and
musket.
On the 4th of December, 1682, a general convention was held at
Chester. The object was to complete the territorial legislation — a work
M'hich occupied three days. At the conclusion of the session, Penn de-
livered an address to the assembly, and then hastened to the Chesapeake
to confer with Lord Baltimore about the boundaries of their respective
provinces. After a month's absence he returned to Chester and busied
himself with drawing a map of his proposed capital. ■ The beautiful neck
of land between the Schuylkill and the Delaware was selected and ])ur-
chased of the Swedes. In February of 1683 the native chestnuts, wal-
PENNSYLVANIA.
213
PHILADEIiPHIA AND VICINITY.
nuts and ashes were blazed to indicate the lines of the streets, and Phil-
adelphia— City of Brotherly Love — was founded. Within a
month a general assembly was in session at the new capital. The people
were eager that their Charter of Liberties, now to be framed, should be
dated at Philadelphia. The work of
legislation was begun and a form of
government adopted which was essen-
tially a representative democracy. The
leading officers were the governor, a
council consisting of a limited number
of members chosen for three years,
and a larger popular assembly, to be
annually elected. Penn conceded
everything to the people; but the
power of vetoing objectionable acts of
the council was left in his hands.
The growth of Philadelphia
was astonishing. In the summer of
1683 there were only three or four
houses. Tlie ground-squirrels still lived in their burrows, and the wild
deer ran through the town without alarm. In 1685 the city contained
six hundred houses ; the schoolmaster had come and the printing-press
had begun its work. In another year Philadelphia had outgrown New
York. Penn's work of establishing a free State in America had been
well and nobly done. In August of 1684 he took an affectionate fare-
well of his flourishing colony, and sailed for England. Thomas Lloyd
was appointed as president during the absence of the proprietor, and five
commissioners, members of the provincial council, were chosen to assist
in the government.
Nothing occurred to disturb the peace of Pennsylvania until the
secession of Delaware in 1691. The three lower counties, which, ever
since the arrival of Penn, had been united on terms of equality with the
six counties of Pennsylvania, became dissatisfied with some acts of the
general assembly and insisted on a separation. The proprietor gave a
reluctant consent; Delaware withdrew from the union and received a
separate deputy-governor. Such was the . condition of affairs after the
abdication of King James II.
William Penn was a friend and favorite of the Stuart kings. It
was from Charles II. that he had received the charter of Pennsylvania.
Now that the royal house was overthrown, he sympathized with the fallen
monarch and looked with coldness on the new sovereigns, William and
214 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Mary. For some real or supposed adherence to the cause of the exiled
James II., Perm was several times arrested and imprisoned. In 1692
his proprietary rights were taken away, and by a royal commission the
government of Pennsylvania was transferred to Fletcher of New York.
In the following year Delaware shared the same fate ; all the provinces
between Connecticut and Marj'land were consolidated under Fletcher's
authority. In the mean time, the suspicions against Penn's loyalty were
found to be groundless, and he was restored to his rights as governor of
Pennsylvania.
In December of 1699, Penn again visited his American common-
wealth, now groM^n into a State. The prosperity of the province was all
that could be desired ; but the people were somewhat dissatisfied with tlie
forms of government. The lower counties were again embittered against
the acts of the assembly. In order to restore peace and harmony, the
benevolent proprietor drew up another constitution, more liberal than the
first, extending the powers of the people and omitting the objectionable
features of the former charter. But Delaware had fallen into chronic
discontent, and would not accept the new frame of government. In 1702
the general assemblies of the two provinces were convened apart ; and in
the following year Delaware and Pennsylvania were finally separated.
But the rights of Penn as j^roprietor of the whole territory remained as
before, and a common governor continued to preside over both colonies.
In the winter of 1701, William Penn bade a final adieu to his
friends in America and returned to England. He left Pennsylvania
in a state of peace and prosperity. Though there was not a single fort
within her borders, the province had been secure against invasion.
With neither police nor militia, the people Avent abroad in safety.
With no difference in rank, no preference in matters of opinion, and
no proscription for religion's sake, the colony flourished and waxed
strong. But the English ministers had now formed the design of
abolishing all the proprietary governments, with a view to the estab-
lishment of royal governments instead. The presence and influence
of Penn were especially required in England in order to prevent the
success of the ministerial scheme. After much controversy his rights
were recognized and secured against encroachment. In the mean
time, the affairs of Pennsylvania were administered by the deputy-
governors, Andrew Hamilton and John Evans. The latter, a worldly
sort of man, not very faithful to the principles of the Friends, greatly
troubled the province by purchasing warlike stores, building forts,
and attempting to organize a regiment of militia. The assembly en-
tered a strong protest against these proceedings, so irreconcilable with
PENNS YL VANIA. 215
the policy of the Quakers, and in 1708 Evans was removed from
office. After him Charles Gookin received a commission as dep-
uty-governor and entered upon his administration in 1709. Soon
afterwards Penn was well-nigh overwhelmed by the rascality of his
English agent, Ford, who first involved him in debt and then had
him imprisoned. From a shameful confinement of many months he
was finally released, and his old age was brightened by a gleam of
prosperity. But the end of his labors was at hand. In July of 1718
the magnanimous founder of Pennsylvania sank to his final rest. His
estates, vast and valuable, but much encumbered with debt, were be-
queathed to his three sons, John, Thomas and Richard, who thus be-
came proprietors of Pennsylvania. By them, or their deputies, the
province was governed until the American Revolution. In the year
1779 the entire claims of the Penn family to the soil and jurisdiction
of the State were purchased by the legislature of Pennsylvania for a
hundred and thirty thousand pounds sterling.
The colonial history of the State founded by William Penn and
the Quakers is one of special interest and pleasure. It is a narrative
that recounts the victories of peace and the triumph of the nobler
virtues over violence and wrong. It is doubtful whether the history
of any other colony in the world is touched with so many traits of
innocence and truth. When the nations grow mercenary and the
times seem full of fraud, the early annals of Pennsylvania may well
be recited as a perpetual protest against the seeming success of evil.
"I will found a free colony for all mankind," were the words of
William Penn. How well his work was done shall be fitly told
when the bells of his capital city shall ring out the first glad notes
of American Independence.
COLONIAL HISTORY.— Continued.
MINOR SOUTHERN COLONIES.
CHAPTER XXyi.
MARYLAND.
CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH was the first white man to explore the
Chesapeake and its tributaries. After him, in 1621, William Clay-
borne, a resolute and daring English surveyor, Avas sent out by the
London Company to make a map of the country about the head-waters
of the bay. By the second charter of Virginia the territory of that
province had been extended on the north to the forty-first parallel of
latitude. All of the present State of Maryland was included in this
enlargement, which also embraced the whole of Delaware and the greater
part of New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The ambition of Virginia was
greatly excited by the possession of this vast domain; to explore and
occupy it was an enterprise of the highest importance.
Clayborne was a member of the council of Virginia, and secretary
of state in that colony. In May of 1631 he received a royal commission
authorizing him to discover the sources of the Chesapeake Bay, to survey
the country as far as the forty-first degree of latitude, to establish a trade
with the Indians, and to exercise the right of government over the com-
panions of his voyage. This commission was confirmed by Governor
Harvey of Virginia, and in the spring of the following year Clayborne
began his important and arduous work. The members of the London
Company were already gathering imaginary riches from the immense fur-
trade of the Potomac and the Susquehanna.
The enterprise of Clayborne was attended with success. A trading-
post was established on Kent Island, and another at the head of the bay,
in the vicinity of Havre de Grace. The many rivers that fall into the
Chesapeake were again explored and a trade opened with the natives.
The limits of Virginia were about to be extended to the borders of New
Netherland. But in the mean time, a train of circumstances had been
(216)
MARYLAND.
217
prepared in England by which the destiny of several American provinces
was completely changed. As in many other instances, religious perse-
cution again contributed to lay the foundation of a new State in the
wilderness. And Sir George Calvert, of Yorkshire, was the man who
was destined to become the founder. Born in 1580 ; educated at Oxford;
a. man of much travel and vast experience ; an ardent and devoted Cath-
olic; a friend of hu-
manity ; honored with
knighthood, and after-
ward with an Irish
peerage and the title
of Lord Baltimore,,
— he now in middle
life turned aside from
the dignities of rank
and affluence to devote
the energies of his life
to the welfare of the
oppressed. For the
Catholics of England,
as well as the dissent-
ing Protestants, were
afflicted with many
and bitter persecu-
tions.
Lord Baltimore's
first American enter-
prise was the planting
of a Catholic colony
in Newfoundland. King James, who was not unfriendly to the Eoman
Church, had granted him a patent for the southern promontory of the
island; and here, in 1623, a refuge was established for distressed Cath-
olics. But in such a place no colony could be successful. The district
was narrow, cheerless, desolate. Profitable industry was impossible.
French ships hovered around the coast and captured the English fishing-
boats. It became evident that the settlement must be removed, and Lord
Baltimore wisely turned his attention to the sunny country of the Ches-
apeake.
In 1629 he made a visit to Virginia. The general assembly offered
him citizenship on condition that he would take an oath of allegiance ;
but the oath was of such a sort as no honest Catholic could subscribe to^
liOBD BALTIMORE.
218 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
In vain did Sir George plead for toleration ; the assembly was inexorable.
It was on the part of the Virginians a short-sighted and ruinous policy.
For the London Company had already been dissolved ; the king might
therefore rightfully regrant that vast territory north of the Potomac
which by the terms of the second charter had been given to Virginia.
Lord Baltimore left the narrow-minded legislators, returned to London,
himself drew up a charter for a new State on the Chesapeake, and easily
induced his friend, King Charles L, to sign it. The Virginians had
^aved their religion and lost a province.
The territory embraced by the new patent was bounded by the
ocean, by the fortieth parallel of latitude, by a line drawn due south from
that parallel to the most western fountain of the Potomac, by the river
itself from its source to the bay, and by a line running due east from the
mouth of the river to the Atlantic. The domain included the whole of
the present States of Maryland and Delaware and a large part of Penn-
sylvania and New Jersey. Here it was the purpose of the magnanimous
proprietor to establish an asylum for all the afflicted of his own faith, and
to plant a State on the broad basis of religious toleration and popular lib-
erty. The provisions of the charter were the most liberal and ample which
had ever received the sanction of the English government. Christianity
was declared to be the religion of the State, but no preference was given
to any sect or creed. The lives and property of the colonists were care-
fully guarded. Free trade was declared to be the law of* the province,
and arbitrary taxation was forbidden. The rights of the proprietor ex-
tended only to the free appointment of the officers of his government. The
power of making and amending the laws was conceded to the freemen of
the colony or their representatives.
One calamity darkened the prospect. Before the liberal patent could
receive the seal of State Sir George Calvert died. His title and estates
descended to his son Cecil; and to him, on the 20th of June, 1632, the
charter which had been intended for his noble father was finally issued.
In honor of Henrietta Maria, daughter of Henry IV. of France and
wife of Charles L, the name of Maryland was conferred on the new
province. Independence of Virginia was guaranteed in the constitution
of the colony, and no danger was to be anticipated from the feeble forces
of New Netherland. It only remained for the younger Lord Baltimore
to raise a company of emigrants and carry out his father's benevolent
designs. The work went forward slowly, and it was not until November
of 1633 that a colony numbermg two hundred persons could be collected.
Meanwhile, Cecil Calvert had abandoned the idea of coming in person to
America, and had appointed his brother Leonard to accompany the col-
MARYLAND. 219
onists to their destination, and to act as deputy-governor of the new
province.
In March of the following year the immigrants arrived at Old
Point Comfort. Leonard Calvert bore a letter from King Charles to
Governor Harvey of Virginia, commanding him to receive the new-
comers with courtesy and favor. The order was complied with ; but the
Virginians could look only with intense jealousy on a movement which
must soon deprive them of the rich fur-trade of the Chesapeake. The
colonists proceeded up the bay and entered the Potomac. At the mouth
of Piscataway Creek, nearly opposite Mount Vernon, the pinnace was
moored, and a cross w^as set up on an island. On the present site of Fort
Washington there was an Indian village whose inhabitants came out to
meet the English. A conference was held, and the sachem of the nation
told Leonard Calvert in words of dubious meaning that he and his colony
might stay or go just as they pleased. Considering this answer as a
menace, and deeming it imprudent to plant his first settlement so far up
the river, Calvert again embarked with his companions, and dropped down
stream to the mouth of the St. Mary's, within fifteen miles of the bay.
Ascending the estuaiy for about ten miles, he came to an Indian town.
The natives had been beaten in battle by the Susquehannas, and were on
the eve of migrating into the interior. The village was already half
■deserted. With the consent of the Eed men, the English moved into the
vacant huts. The rest of the town was purchased, with the adjacent ter-
ritory, the Indians promising to give possession at the opening of the
spring. The name of St. Mary's was given to this the oldest colony of
Maryland, and the name of the river was changed to St. George's.
Calvert treated the natives with great liberality. The consequence
was that the settlers had peace and plenty. The Indian women taught
the wives of the English how to make corn-bread, and the friendly war-
riors instructed the colonists in the mysteries of hunting. Game was
abundant. The lands adjacent to the village were already under cultiva-
tion. The settlers had little to do but to plant their gardens and fields
and wait for the coming harvest. There was neither anxiety nor want.
The dream of Sir George Calvert was realized. Within six months the
colony of St. Mary's had grown into greater prosperity than the settle-
ment at Jamestown had reached in as many years. Best of all, the pledge
of civil liberty and religious toleration was redeemed to the letter. Two
years before the founding of Rhode Island the Catholics of the Ches-
apeake had emancipated the human conscience, built an asylum for the
distressed, and laid the foundations of a free State.
Within less than a year after the founding of St. Mary's the free-
220 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
men were convened in a general assembly. In February of 1635 the-
work of colonial legislation was first begun. The records of this and
several succeeding sessions were destroyed in the rebellion of 1645^
and not much is known concerning the character of the earliest laws.
But it is certain that the province was involved in difficulty. For Clay-
borne still stood his ground on Kent Island, and openly resisted Lord
Baltimore's authority. His settlement on the island was almost as strong
as the colony at St. Mary's ; and Clayborne, unscrupulous as to the
right, and confident in his power, resolved to appeal to arms. In 1637
a bloody skirmish occurred on the banks of the river Wicomico, on the
eastern shore of the bay. Several lives were lost, but the insurgents were
defeated. Calvert's forces proceeded to Kent Island, overpowered thft
settlement, and executed one or two persons who had participated in the
rebellion.
Clayborne, in the mean time, had escaped into Virginia. The
assembly of Maryland demanded the fugitive ; but the governor refused,
and sent the prisoner to England for trial. The legislators of St. Mary's
charged the absent criminal with murder and piracy, tried him, con-
demned him and confiscated his estates. Clayborne, who was safe in
England, appealed to the king. The cause was heard by a committee of
Parliament, and it was decided that the commission of Clayborne, which
was only a license to trade in the Chesapeake, had been annulled by the
dissolution of the London Company, and that the charter of Lord Balti-
more was valid against all opposing claimants. Clayborne, however, was
allowed to go at large.
In 1639 a regular representative government was established in
Maryland. Hitherto a system of popular democracy had prevailed in the
province ; each freeman had been allowed a vote in determining the laws.
With the growth of the colony it was deemed expedient to substitute the
more convenient method of representation. When the delegates came
together, a declaration of rights was adopted, and the prerogative of the
proprietor more clearly defined. All the broad and liberal principles of
the colonial patent were reaffirmed. The powers of the assembly were
made coextensive with those of the House of Commons in England.
The rights of citizenship were declared to be identical with those of Eng-
lish subjects in tlie mother country.
The Indians of Maryland and Virginia had now grown jealous of
foreign encroachments. Vague rumors of the English Revolution had
been borne to the Red men, and they believed themselves able to expel
the intruders from the country. In 1642 hostilities were begun on the
Potomac, and for two years the province was involved in war. But the^
MARYLAND. 221
settlements of Maryland were few and compact, and no great suffering
was occasioned by the onsets of the barbarians. In 1644 the savages
agreed to bury the hatchet and to renew the broken pledges of friendship.
Hardly, however, had the echo of Indian warfare died away, when the
colony was visited with a worse calamity by the return of its old enemy,
William Clayborne.
He came to find revenge, and found it. The king was now at
war with his subjects, and could give no aid to the proprietor of an
American province. Clayborne saw his opportunity, hurried to Mary-
land, and raised the standard of rebellion. Arriving in the province in
1644, he began to sow the seeds of sedition by telling the restless and
lawless spirits of the colony that they were wronged and oppressed by a
usurping government. Early in 1645 an insurrection broke out. Com-
panies of desperate men came together, and found in Clayborne a natural
leader. The government of Leonard Calvert was overthrown, and the
governor obliged to fly for his life. Escaping from the province, he found
refuge and jjrotection with Sir William Berkeley of Virginia. Clayborne
seized the colonial records of Maryland, and destroyed them. One act of
violence followed another. The government was usurped, and for more
ihan a year the colony was under the dominion of the insurgents. Mean-
while, however. Governor Calvert collected his forces, returned to the
province, defeated the rebels, and in August of 1646 succeeded in restor-
ing his authority. It marks the mild and humane sj^irit of the Calverts
that those engaged in this unjustifiable insurrection were pardoned by a
general amnesty.
The acts of the provincial legislature in 1649 were of special im-
portance. It was enacted in broad terms that no person believing in the
fundamental doctrines of Christianity should, on account of his religious
opinions or practices, be in any wise distressed within the borders of
Maryland. It was declared a finable offence for citizens to apply to each
other the opprobrious names used in religious controversy. Freedom of
conscience was reiterated with a distinctness that could not be misunder-
stood. While Massachusetts was attempting by proscription to establish
Puritanism as the faith of New England, and while the Episcopalians of
Jamestown were endeavoring by exclusive legislation to make the Church
of England the Church of Virginia, Maryland was joining with Rhode
Island and Connecticut in proclaiming religious freedom. It sometimes
happened in those days that Protestants escaping from Protestants found
an asylum with the Catholic colonists of the Chesapeake.
In 1650 the legislative body of Maryland was divided into two
branches. The upj)er house consisted of the governor and members of
222 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
his council appointed by the proprietor. The lower house, or general
assembly, was composed of burgesses elected by the people of the province.
Again the rights of Lord Baltimore were carefully defined by provincial
law. An act was also passed declaring that no taxes should be levied
without the consent of the assembly. Such was the condition of affairs
in the colony when the commonwealth was established in England. Par-
liament was now the supreme power in the mother country, and it could
hardly be expected that Lord Baltimore's charter would be allowed to
stand.
In 1651 parliamentary commissioners were appointed to come to
America and assume control of the colonies bordering on the Chesapeake.
Clayborne was a member of the body thus appointed. When the com-
missioners arrived in Maryland, Stone, the deputy of Lord Baltimore,
was deposed from office. A compromise was presently effected between
the adherents of the proprietor and the opposing faction ; and in June of
the following year. Stone, with three members of his council, was per-
mitted to resume the government. In April of 1653 the Long Par-
liament, by whose authority the commissioners had been appointed, was
dissolved. Stone thereupon published a proclamation declaring that the
recent interference of Clayborne and his associates had been a rebellious
usurpation. Clayborne, enraged at this proclamation, collected a force in
Virginia, returned into Maryland, again drove Stone out of office, and
entrusted the government to ten commissioners appointed by himself.
The Puritan and republican party in Maryland had now grown
sufficiently strong to defy the proprietor and the Catholics. A Protestant
assembly was convened at Patuxent in October of 1654. The first act
was to acknowledge the supremacy of Cromwell ; the next to disfranchise
the Catholics and to deprive them of the protection of the laws. The un-
grateful representatives seemed to forget that if Lord Baltimore had been
equally intolerant not one of them would have had even a residence
within the limits of Maryland. It would be difficult to find a more
odious piece of legislation than that of the assembly at Patuxent. Of
course the Catholic party would not submit to a code by which they were
virtually banished from their own province.
Civil war ensued. Governor Stone organized and armed the
militia, seized the records of the colony, and marched against the oppos-
ing forces. A decisive battle was fought just across the estuarj' from the
present site of Annapolis. The Catholics were defeated, wuth a loss of
fifty men in killed and wounded. Stone himself was taken prisoner, and
was only saved from death by the personal friendship of some of the in-
surgents. Three of the Catholic leaders were tried by a court-martial
MARYLAND. 223"
and executed. Cromwell paid but little attention to these atrocities, and
made no effort to sustain the government of Lord Baltimore.
In 1656 Josias Fendall, a weak and impetuous man, was sent out
by the proprietor as governor of the province. There was now a Cath-
olic insurrection with Fendall at the head. For two years the govern-
ment was divided, the Catholics exercising authority at St. Mary's, and
the Protestants at Leonardstown. At length, in March of 1658, a com-
promise was effected; Fendall was acknowledged as governor, and the-
acts of the recent Protestant assemblies were recognized as valid. A gen-
eral amnesty was published, and the colony was again at peace.
I When the death of Cromwell was announced in Maryland, the
provincial authorities were much perplexed. One of four courses might
be pursued : Richard Cromwell might be recognized as protector ; Charles
II. might be proclaimed as king ; Lord Baltimore might be acknowledged
as hereditary proprietor ; colonial independence might be declared. The
latter policy was adopted by the assembly. On the 12th of March, 1660,
the rights of Lord Baltimore were formally set aside; the provincial
council was dissolved, and the whole power of government was assumed
by the House of Burgesses. The act of independence was adopted just
one day before a similar resolution was passed by the general assembly of
Virginia. The population of Maryland had now reached ten thousand.
On the restoration of monarchy the rights of the Baltimores were
again recognized, and Philip Calvert was sent out as deputy-governor. In
the mean time, Fendall had resigned his trust as agent of the proprietor,
and had accepted an election by the people. He was now repaid for his
double-dealing with an arrest, a trial and a condemnation on a charge
of treason. Nothing saved his life but the clemency of Lord Baltimore,
who, with his customary magnanimity, proclaimed a general pardon.
Sir Cecil Calvert died in 1675, and his son Charles, a young man
who had inherited the virtues of the illustrious family, succeeded to the
estates and title of Baltimore. For sixteen years he exercised the rights
of proprietary governor of Maryland. The laws of the province were
carefully revised, and the liberal principles of the original charter re-
affirmed as the basis of the State. Only once during this period was the
happiness of the colony disturbed. When the news arrived of the abdi-
cation of King James IL, the deputy of Lord Baltimore hesitated to
acknowledge the new sovereigns, William and Mary. An absurd rumor
was spread abroad that the Catholics had leagued Avith the Indians for
the purpose of destroying the Protestants of Maryland in a general mas-
sacre. An opposing force was organized ; and in 1689 the Catholic party
was compelled to surrender the government. For two years the Protest-
224 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ants held the province, and civil authority was exercised by a body called
the Convention of Associates.
On the 1st day of June, 1691, the government of Maryland was
revolutionized by the act of King William. The charter of Lord Balti-
more was arbitrarily taken away, and a royal governor appointed over the
province. Sir Lionel Copley received a commission, and assumed the
government in 1692. Every vestige of the old patent was swept away.
The Episcopal Church was established by law and supported by taxation.
Religious toleration was abolished and the government administered on
despotic principles. This condition of affairs continued until 1715, when
Queen Anne was induced to restore the heir of Lord Baltimore to the
rights of his ancestor. Maryland again became a proprietary government
under the authority of the Calverts, and so remained until the Revolu-
tionary war.
The early history of the colony planted by the first Lord Balti-
more on the shores of the Chesapeake is full of j)rofitable instruction. In
no other American province were the essential vices of intolerance more
clearly manifested; in no other did the principle of religious freedom
shine with a brighter lustre. Nor will the thoughtful student fail to
observe how the severe dogmas of Catholicism were softened down when
brought into contact with the ennobling virtues of the Calverts, until over
river and bay and shore a mellow light was diffused like a h-i'io shining
fix)m the altars of the ancient Church.
CHAPTER XXVII.
NORTH CAROLINA.
THE first effort to colonize North Carolina was made by Sir Walter
Raleigh. In 1630 an immense tract lying between the thirtieth and
the thirty-sixth parallels of latitude was granted by King Charles to Sir
Robert Heath. But neither the proprietor nor his successor, Lord Mai-
travers, succeeded in planting a colony. After a useless existence of
thirty-three years, the patent was revoked by the English sovereign. The
only effect of Sir Robert's charter was to perjietuate the name of Carolina,
which had been given to the country by John Ribault in 1562.
In the year 1622 the country as far south as the river Chowan was
NORTH CAROLINA. 225
explored by For}-, the secretary of Virginia. Twenty years later a com-
pany of Virginians obtained leave of the assembly to prosecute discovery
on the lower Roanoke and establish a trade with the natives. The first
actual settlement was made near the mouth of the Chowan about the year
1G51. The country was visited just afterw^ard by Clayborne of Maryland,
and in 1661 a company of Puritans from New England passed down the
coast, entered the mouth of Cape Fear River, purchased lands of the
Indians and established a colony on Oldtown Creek, nearly two hundred
miles farther south than any other English settlement. In 1663 Lord
Clarendon, General Monk, who was now honored with the title of duke
of Albemarle, and six other noblemen, received at the hands of Charles
11. a patent for all the country between the thirty-sixth parallel and the
river St. John's, in Florida. With this grant the colonial history of
North Carolina properly begins.
In the same year a civil government was organized by the settlers
on the Chowan. William Drummond was chosen governor, and the
name of Albemarle County Colony was given to the district border-
ing on the sound. In 1665 it was found that the settlement was north
of the thirty-sixth j)arallel, and consequently beyond the limits of the
province. To remedy this defect the grant was extended on the north to
thiriy-six degrees and thirty minutes, the present boundary of Virginia,
and westward to the Pacific. During the same year the little Puritan
colony on Cape Fear River was broken up by the Indians ; but scarcely
had this been done when the site of the settlement, with thirty-two miles
square of the surrounding territory, was purchased by a company of
planters from Barbadoes. A new county named Clarendon was laid
out, and Sir John Yeamans elected governor of the colony. The pro-
prietors favored the settlement; immigration was rapid; and within a year
eight hundred people had settled along the river.
The work of preparing a frame of government for the new province
was assigned to Sir Ashley Cooper, earl of Shaftesbury. The proprietors,
not without reason, looked forward to the time when a powerful nation
should arise within the borders of their vast domain. To draft a suitable
constitution was deemed a work of the greatest importance. Shaftesbury
was a brilliant and versatile statesman who had entire confidence in his
abilities ; but in order to give complete assurance of perfection in the
proposed statutes, the philoso-pher John Locke was employed by Sir
Ashley and his associates to prepare the constitution. The legislation of
the world furnishes no parallel for the pompous absurdity of Locke's
performance.
From ]\Iarch until July of 1669 the philosopher worked away in.
15
226 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the preparation of his Grand Model ; then the mighty instrument was
done, and signed. It contained a hundred and twenty articles, called the
" Fundamental Constitutions ;" and this was but the beginning of the im-
perial scheme which was to stand like a colossus over the huts and pas-
tures along the Cape Fear and Chowan Rivers. The empire of Carolina
was divided into vast districts of four hundred and eighty thousand acres
each. Political rights were made dependent upon hereditary wealth.
The offices were put* beyond the reach of the people. There were two
grand orders of nobility. There were dukes, earls and marquises;
knights, lords and esquires ; baronial ' courts, heraldic ceremony, and
every sort of feudal nonsense that the human imagination could conceive
of. And this was the magnificent constitution which a great statesman
and a wise philosopher had planned for the government of a few colonists
who lived on venison and potatoes and paid their debts with tobacco !
It was one thing to make the grand model, and another thing to get
it across the Atlantic. In this the proprietors never succeeded. All at-
tempts to establish the pompous scheme of government ended in necessary
failure. Tlie settlers of Albemarle and Clarendon had meanwhile learned
to govern themselves after the simple manner of pioneers, and they could
but regard the model and its authors with disdainful contempt. After
twenty years of fruitless effort, Shaftesbury and his associates folded up
their grand constitution and concluded that an empire in the pine forests
of North Carolina was impossible.
The soil of Clarendon county was little better than a desert. For a
while a trade in staves and furs supplied a profitable industry ; but when
this traffic was exhausted, the colonists began to remove to other settle-
ments. In 1671, Governor Yeamans was transferred to the colony which
had been founded in the previous year at the mouth of Ashley River, and
before the year 1690 the whole county of Clarendon was a second time
surrendered to the native tribes. The settlement north of Albemarle
Sound was more prosperous, but civil dissension greatly retarded the
development of the country.
For the proprietors were already busy trj'^ing to establish their big in-
stitutiong in the feeble province. The humble commerce of the colony was
burdened with an odious duty. Every pound of the eight hundi-ed hogs-
heads of tobacco annually produced was taxed a penny for the benefit of
the government. There were at this time less than four thousand people
in North Carolina, and yet the traffic of these poor settlers with New
England alone was so weighed down with duties as to yield an annual
revenue of twelve thousand dollars. Miller, the governor, was a hareh.
and violent man. A gloomy opposition to the proprietary government
I^ORTH CAROLINA. 227
pervaded the colony; and when, in 1676, large numbers of refugees from
Virginia — patriots who had fought in Bacon's rebellion — arrived in the
Chowan, the spirit of discontent was kindled into open resistance.
The arrival of a merchant-ship from Boston and an attempt to en-
force the revenue laws furnished the occasion and pretext of an insurrec-
tion. The vessel evaded the payment of duty, and waf declared a smug-
gler. But the people flew to arms, seized the governor and six members
of his council, overturned the existing order of things and established a
new government of theu" own. John Culpepper, the leader of the insur-
gents, was chosen governor; other officers were elected by the people; and
in a few weeks the colony was as tranquil as if Locke's grand model had
never been heard of. But in the next year, 1679, the imprisoned Mil-
ler and his associates escaped from confinement, and going to London
told a dolorous story about their wrongs and sufferings. The English
lords of trade took the matter in hand, and it seemed that North Carolina
was doomed to punishment.
But the colonists were awake to their interests. Governor Cul-
pepper went boldly to England to defend himself and to justify the rebel-
lion. He was seized, indicted for high treason, tried and acquitted by a
jury of Englishmen. It marks a peculiar feature of this cause that the
sagacious earl of Shaftesbury came forward at the trial and spoke in de-
fence of the prisoner. But Lord Clarendon was so much vexed at the
acquittal of the rebellious governor that he sold his rights as proprietor to
the infamous Seth Sothel. This man in 1680 was sent out by his associ-
ates as governor of the province. In crossing the ocean he was captured
by a band of pirates, and for three years the colony was saved from his
evil presence. At last, in 1683, he arrived in Carolina and begaa his
work, which consisted in oppressing the people and defrauding the pro-
prietors. Cranfield of New Hampsliire, Cornbury of New York and
Wingfield of Virginia were all respectable men in comparison with Sothel,
whose sordid passions have made him notorious as the worst colonial gov-
ernor that ever plundered an American province. After five years of
avaricious tyranny, the base, gold-gathering, justice-despising despot was
overthrown in an insurrection. Finding himself a prisoner, and fearing
the wrath of the defrauded proprietors more than he feared the indigna-
tion of the outraged colonists, he begged to be tried by the assembly of
the province. The request was granted, and the culprit escaped with a
sentence of disfranchisement and a twelve months' exile from North
Carolina.
Sothel was succeeded in the governorship by Ludwell, who arrived
in 1689. His administration of six years' duration was a period of peace
228 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and contentment. The wrongs of his predecessor were corrected as far as
possible by a just and humane chief magistrate. In 1695 came Sir John
Archdale, another of the proprietors, the rival of Ludwell in prudence
and integrity. Then followed the tranquil administration of Governor
Henderson Walker; then, in 1704, the foolish attempt of Robert Daniel
to establish the Church of England. In the mean time, the colony had
grown strong in population and resources. The country south of the
Roanoke besran to be dotted with farms and hamlets. Other settlers
came from Virginia and Maryland. Quakers came from New England
and the Delaware. A band of French Huguenots came in 1707. A
hundred families of German refugees, buffeted with war and persecution,
left the banks of the Rhine to find a home on the banks of the Neuse.
Peasants from Switzerland came and founded New Berne at the mouth
of the River Trent.
The Indians of North Carolina had gradually wasted away. Pes-
tilence and strong drink had reduced jiowerful tribes to a shadow. Some
nations were already extinct ; others, out of thousands of strong-limbed
warriors, had only a dozen men remaining. The lands of the savages had
passed to the whites, sometimes by purchase, sometimes by fraud, often
by forcible occupation. The natives were jealous and revengeful, but
weak. Of all the mighty tribes that had inhabited the Carolinas in the
days of Sir Walter Raleigh, only the Corees and the Tuscaroras were
still formidable. The time had come when these unhappy nations, like
the rest of their race, were doomed to destruction. The conflict which
ended, and could only end, m the ruin of the Red men, began in the year
1711.
In September of this year, Lawson, the surv^eyor-general of North
Carolina, ascended the Neuse to explore and map the country. The In-
dians were alarmed at the threatened encroachment upon their territory.
A band of warriors took Lawson prisoner, led him before their council,
condemned him and burned him to death. On the night of the 22d, com-
panies of savages rose out of the woods, fell upon the scattered settlements
between the Roanoke and Pamlico Sound, and murdered a hundred and
thirty persons. Civil dissension prevented the colonial authorities from
adopting vigorous measures of defence. The protection of the people
and the punishment of the barbarians were left to the neighboring prov-
inces. Spottswood, governor of Virginia, made some unsuccessful efforts
to render assistance, and Colonel Barnwell came from South Carolina with
a company of militia and a body of friendly Cherokees, Creeks and Cataw-
bas. The savages were driven into their fort in the northern part of
Craven county, but could not be dislodged. While afiPairs were in this
NORTH CAROLINA. 229
condition a treaty of peace was made ; but Barnwell's men, on their way
homeward, violated the compact, sacked an Indian village and made
slaves of the inhabitants. The war was at once renewed.
In September of the next year, while the conflict was yet unde-
cided, the yellow fever broke out in the country south of Pamlico Sound.
So dreadful were the ravages of the pestilence that the peninsula was
wellnigh swept of its inhabitants. Meanwhile, Colonel James Moore of
South Carolina had arrived, in command of a regiment of whites and In-
dians, and the Tuscaroras were pursued to their principal fort on Cotentnea
Creek, in Greene county. This place was besieged until the latter part of
March, 1713, and was then carried by assault. Eight hundred warriors
were taken prisoners. The power of the hostile nation was broken, but
the Tuscarora chieftains were divided in council ; some were desirous of
peace, and some voted to continue the war. This difference of opinion
led to a division of the tribe. Those who wished for peace were permit-
ted to settle in a single commrmity in the county of Hyde. Their hostile
brethren, seeing that further resistance would be hopeless, determined to
leave the country. In the month of June they abandoned their hunting-
grounds made sacred by the traditions of their fathers, marched across
Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania, reached Northern New York,
joined their kinsmen, the Oneidas, and became the sixth nation of the
Iroquois confederacy.
Thus far the two Carolinas had continued under a common gov-
ernment. In 1729 a final separation was effected between the provinces
north and south of Cape Fear River, and a royal governor appointed over
each. In spite of Locke's grand model and the Tuscarora war, in spite
of the threatened Spanish invasion of 1744, the northern colony had greatly
prospered. The intellectual development of the people had not been as
rapid as the growth in numbers and in wealth. Little attention had been
given to questions of religion. There was no minister in the province
until 1703. Two years later the first church was built. The first court-
house was erected in 1722, and the printing-press did not begin its work
until 1754. But the people were brave and patriotic. They loved their
country, and called it the Land of Summer. In the farmhouse and the
village, along the banks of the rivers and the borders of the primeval for-
ests, the spirit of liberty pervaded every breast. The love of freedom was
intense, and hostility to tyranny a universal passion. In the times of
Sothel it was said of the North Carolinans that they would not pay trib-
ute even to Coesar,
23e HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
IN January of 1670 the proprietors of Carolina sent out a colony under
command of Joseph West and William Sayle. There was at this time
not a single European settlement between the mouth of Cape Fear River
and the St. John's, in Florida. Here was a beautiful coast of nearly four
hundred miles ready to receive the beginnings of civilization. The new
emigrants, sailing by way of Barbadoes, steered far to the south, and
reached the mainland in the country of the Savannah. The vessels first
entered the harbor of Port Royal. It was now a hundred and eight years
since John Ribault, on an island in this same harbor, had set up a stone
engraved with the lilies of France ; now the Englishman had come.
The ships were anchored near the site of Beaufort. But the colo-
nists were dissatisfied with the appearance of the country, and did not go
ashore. Sailing northward along the coast for forty miles, they next en-
tered the mouth of Ashley River, and landed where the first high land
appeared upon the southern bank. Here were laid the foundations of
Old Charleston, so named in honor of King Charles II. Of this, the
oldest town in South Carolina, no trace remains except the line of a ditch
which was digged around the fort ; a cotton-field occupies the site of the
ancient settlement.
Sayle had been commissioned as governor and West as commercial
agent of the colony. The settlers had been furnished with a copy of
Locke's big constitution, but they had no more use for it than for a dead
elephant. Instead of the grand model, a little government was organized
on the principles of common sense. Five councilors were elected by the
people, and five others appointed by the proprietors. Over this council
of ten the governor presided. Twenty delegates, composing a house of
representatives, were chosen by the colonists. Within two years the sys-
tem of popular government was firmly established in the province. Ex-
cept the prevalence of diseases peculiar to the southern climate, no calam-
ity darkened the prospects of the rising State.
In the beginning of 1671 Governor Sayle died, and M^'est, by com-
mon consent, assumed the duties of the vacant office. After the lapse of
SOUTH CAROLINA. 231
a few months, Sir John Yeamans, who had been governor of the northern
province and was now in Barbadoes, was commissioned by the proprie-
tors as chief magistrate of the southern colony. He brought with him to
Ashley River a large cargo of African slaves. From the beginning the
colonists had devoted themselves to planting ; but the English laborers,
unused as yet to the climate, could hardly endure the excessive heats of the
sultry fields. To the Caribbee negroes, already accustomed to the burn-
in o- suu of the tropics, the Carolina summer seemed temperate and pleasant.
Thus the labor of the black man was substituted for the labor of the white
man, and in less than two years from the founding of the colony the system
of slavery was firmly established. In this respect the history of South
Carolma is peculiar. Slavery had been introduced into all the America©
colonies, but everywhere else the introduction had been effected by those
M'ho were engaged in the slave-trade. In South Carolina alone was the
system adopted as a political and social experiment and with a view to the
regular establishment of a laboring class in the State. Governor Yeamans
was the first to accept this policy, which soon became the general policy
of the province. The importation of negroes went on so rapidly that in
a short time they outnumbered the whites as two to one.
Immigration from England did not lag. During the year 1671 a
system of cheap rents and liberal bounties was adopted by the proprietors,
and the country w^as rapidly filled with people. A tract of a hundred and
fifty acres was granted to ever}^ one who would either immi^-ate or im-
port a negro. Fertile lands were abundant. Wars and pestilence had
almost annihilated the native tribes; whole counties were almost without an
occupant. The disasters of one race had prepared the way for the coming
of another. Only a few years before this time New Netherland had been
conquered by the English. The Dutch were greatly dissatisfied with the
government which the duke of York had established over them, and
began to leave the country. The proprietors of Carolina sent several
ships to New York, loaded them with the industrious but discontented
people, and brought them without expense to Charleston. The unoccupied
lands west of Ashley River were divided among the Dutch, who formed
there a thriving settlement called Jamestown. The fame of the new
country reached Holland, and other emigrants left fatherland to join their
kinsmen in Carolina. Charles IL, who rarely aided a colony, collected a
company of Protestant refugees from the South of Europe, and sent them
to Carolina to introduce the silk- worm and to begin the cultivation of the
grape.
In 1680 the present metropolis of South Carolina was founded. The
site of Old Charleston had been hastily and injudiciously selected. The
232 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
delightful peninsula called Oyster Point, between Ashley and Cooper
Rivers, was now chosen as the spot on which to build a city. The erec-
tion of thirty dwellings during the first summer gave proof of enterprise ;
the name of Charleston was a second time bestowed, and the village
immediately became the capital of the colony. The unhealthy climate
for a while retarded the progress of the new town, but the people were
lull of life and enterprise; storehouses and wharves were built, and mer-
chant-ships soon began to throng the commodious harbor.
Injustice provoked an Indian war. Some vagabond Nesto&s, whose
only offence consisted in strolling through the plantations, were shot.
The tribe appealed to the government, and the proprietors showed a wil-
lingness to punish the wrongdoers ; but the pioneers were determined to
fight and the savages were naturally revengeful. Scenes of violence con-
tinued along the border, and hostilities began in earnest. In the prosecu-
tion of the war the colonists were actuated by a shameful spirit of avarice.
The object was not so much to punish or destroy the savages as to take
them prisoners. A bountj^ was offered for every captured Indian, and as
fast as the warriors were taken they were sold as slaves for the West In-
dies. The petty strife continued for a year, and was then concluded ^vith
a treaty of peace. Commissioners were aj^pointed, to whom all complaints
and disputes between the natives and the colonists should henceforth be
submitted.
South Carolina was favored with rapid immigration, and the immi-
grants were worthy to become the founders of a great State. The best
nations of Europe contributed to people the country between Cape Fear
and the Savannah. England, continued to send her colonies. In 1683
Joseph Blake, a brother of the great English admiral, devoted his fortune
and the last years of his life to bringing a large company of dissenters
from Somersetshire to Charleston. In the same year an Irish colony
under Ferguson arrived at Ashley River, and met a hearty welcome. A
company of Scotch Presbyterians, ten families in all, led by the excellent
Lord Cardross, settled at Port Royal in 1684. The authorities of Charles-
ton claimed jurisdiction there, and the new immigrants reluctantly yielded
to the claim. Two years afterward a band of Spanish soldiers arrived
irom St. Augustine, and the unhappy Scotch exiles were driven from their
homes. But intolerant France gave up more of her subjects than did all
the other nations.
As early as 1598 Henry IV., king of the French, had published a
celebrated proclamation, called the Edict of Nantes, by the terms of which
the Huguenots were protected in their rights of religious worship. Now,
after eighty-seven years of toleration, Louis XIV., blinded with bigotiy
SOUTH CAROLINA. 233
and passion and hoping to make Catholicism universal, revoked the kindly
edict, and exposed the Protestants of his kingdom to the long-suppressed
rage of their enemies. In order to enforce the decree of revocation the
French army was quartered in the towns of the Huguenots, the ports were
closed against emigration, and the borders were watched to prevent escape.
How foolish are the ways of despotism ! In spite of every precaution,
five hundred thousand of the best people of France, preferring banishment
to religious thraldom, escaped from their country and fled, self-exiled, into
foreign lands. The Huguenots were scattered from the Baltic Sea to the
Cape of Good Hope, and on the Western continent from Maine to Flor-
ida. But of all the American colonies. South Carolina received the great-
est number of French refugees within her borders. They were met by
the proprietors with a pledge of protection and a promise of citizenship ;
but neither promise nor pledge was immediately fulfilled, for the colony
had not yet determined what should be its laws of naturalization. Both
the general assembly and the proprietors claimed the right of fixing the
conditions. Until that question could be decided the Huguenots were
kept in suspense, and were sometimes unkindly treated by the jealous
English settlers. Not until 1697 were all discriminations against the
French immigrants removed.
In 1686 came James Colleton as colonial governor. He began his
administration with a foolish attempt to establish the mammoth constitu-
tion of Locke and Shaftesbury. No wonder that the assembly resisted
his authority, and that the people were embittered against him. The rents
came due; payment was refused, and the colony was in a state of rebellion.
In order to divert attention from himself, Colleton published a proclama-
tion setting forth the danger of a pretended invasion by the Indians and
Spaniards. The militia was called out and the province declared under
martial law. It was all in vain. The people were only exasperated by
the arbitrary proceedings of the governor. Tidings came that James II.
had been driven from the throne of England. The popular assembly was
convened, and William and Mary were proclaimed as sovereigns. In
1690 a decree of impeachment was passed against Colleton, and he was
banished from the province.
The people of North Carolina had just performed a similar service
for Seth Sothel. Not satisfied with his previous success, he at once re-
paired to Charleston and assumed the government of the southern colony.
To Sothel's other merits were added the qualifications of a first-rate dem-
agogue ; he induced the people to acquiesce in his usurpation and to sus-
tain his authority. But his avaricious disposition could not long be held
in check. The proprietors disclaimed his acts and after a turbulent rule
234 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of two years, he and his government were overthrown. One bright page
redeems the record of his administration. In May of 1691 the first gen-
eral act of enfranchisement w'as passed in favor of the Huguenots.
Philip Ludwell, who had been collector of customs in Virginia,
and since 1689 governor of North Carolina, was now sent to establish
order in the southern province. He spent a year in a well-meant effort
to administer the government of the proprietors; but the people were
fixed in their antagonism to the constitution, and nothing could be accom-
plished. Ludwell gave up the hopeless task, withdrew from the prov-
ince, and returned to Virginia. South Carolina had fallen into a condi-
tion bordering on anarchy.
Nearly a quarter of a century had elapsed since Locke drafted the
grand model. At last the proprietors came to see that the establishment
of such a monstrous frame of government over an American colony Avas
impossible. Pride said that the constitution should stand, for the nobility
of England had declared it immortal. But self-interest and common
sense demanded its abrogation, and the demand prevailed. In April of
1693 the proprietors assem})led and voted the boasted model out of exist-
ence. It was enacted at the same meeting that since the people of Caro-
lina preferred a simple charter government, their request be granted.
The magnificent paper empire of Shaftesbury was swept into oblivion.
Thomas Smith was now appointed governor, but was soon super-
seded by John Archdale, a distinguished and talented Quaker. Arriving
in 1695, he began an administration so just and wise that dissension ceased
and the colony entered u])0u a new career of prosperity. The quit-rents
on lands were remitted for four years. The people were given the option
of paying their taxes in money or in produce. The Indians were concili-
ated with kindness and protected against kidnappers. Some native Cath-
olics were ransomed from slavery and sent to their homes in Florida, and
the Spanish governor reciprocated the deed Avith a friendly message.
When the old jealousy against the Huguenots asserted itself in the gen-
eral assembly, the benevolent influence of Archdale procured the passage
of a law by which all Christians, except the Catholics, were fully enfran-
chised ; the ungenerous exception was made against the governor's will.
It was a real misfortune to the colony when, in 1698, the good governor
was recalled to England.
James Moore was next commissioned as chief magistrate. The
first important act of his administration was a declaration of hostilities
against the Spanish settlement of St. Augustine. Queen Anne's War had
broken out. The Spaniards were in alliance with the French against the
English. By the ant&gonism of England and Spain, South Carolina and
SOUTH CAROLINA. 235
Florida were brought into conflict. Yet a declaration of war was strong-
ly opposed in the a,ssembly at Charleston, and was only passed by a
small majorit}\ It was voted to raise and equip a force of twelve hun-
dred men, and to invade Florida by land and water. The summer of
1702 was spent in preparation, and in SejDtember the expeditions departed,
the land-forces led by Colonel Daniel and the fleet commanded by the
governor.
The English vessels sailed down the coast, entered the St. John's
and blocked up the river. Daniel marched overland, reached St. Augus-
tine and captured the town. But the Spaniards withdrew without serious
loss into the castle, and bade defiance to the besiegers. Without artilleiy
it was evident that the place could not be taken. Colonel Daniel was
despatched with a sloop to Jamaica to procure cannons for the siege ; but
before his return two Spanish men-of-war appeared at the mouth of the
St. John's, and Governor Moore found himself blockaded. His courage
was not equal to the occasion. Abandoning his ships, he took to the
shore, and collecting his forces hastily retreated into Carolina. Daniel
returned and entered the St. John's, but discovered the danger in time to
make his escape. The governor's retreat occasioned great dissatisfaction.
There were insinuations of cowardice and threats of impeachment, but
no formal action was taken against him. The only results of the unfor-
tunate expedition were debt and paper money. In order to meet the
heavy exjienses of the war, the assembly was obliged to issue bills of
credit to the amount of six thousand pounds sterling.
Governor Moore retrieved his reputation by invading the Indian
nations south-west of the Savannah. In December of 1705 he left the
province at the head of fifty volunteers and a thousand friendl}' nati\'es.
White men had not been seen marching in these woods since the days of
De Soto. On the 14th of the month the invaders reached the fortified
town of Ayavalla, in the neighborhood of St. Mark's. An attack was
made and the church set on fire. A Franciscan monk came out and
begged for mercy ; but the place was carried by assault, and more than
two hundred prisoners were taken, only to be enslaved. On the next day
Moore's forces met and defeated a large body of Indians and Spaniards.
Five important towns were carried in succession, and the English flag
was borne in triumph to the Gulf of Mexico. Communication between
the Spanish settlements of Florida and the French posts in Louisiana
was entirely cut off".
Meanwhile, the Church of England had been established by law
in South Carolina. In the first year of Johnston's administration tlie
High Church party succeeded in getting a majority of one in the colonial
236 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
assembly, and immediately passed an act disfranchising all the dissenters
in the province. An appeal was carried to the proprietors, only to be re-
jected with contempt. The dissenting party next laid their cause before
Parliament, and that body promptly voted that the act of disfranchisement
was contrary to the laws of England, and that the proprietors had for-
feited their charter. The queen's ministers were authorized to declare the
intolerant law null and void. In November of the same year the colo-
nial legislature revoked its own act so far as the disfranchising clause was
concerned ; but Episcopalian ism continued to be the established faith of
the province.
The year 1706 was a stirring epoch in the history of South Caro-
lina. A French and Spanish fleet was sent from Havana to capture
Charleston and subdue the country. The orders were more easily given
than executed. The brave people of the capital flew to arms. Governor
Johnson and Colonel William Rhett inspired the volunteers with courage;
and when the hostile squadron anchored in the harbor, the city was ready
for a stubborn defence. Several times a landing was attempted, but the
invaders were everywhere repulsed. At last a French vessel succeeded in
getting to shore with eight hundred troops, but they were attacked with
fury and driven off" with a loss of three hundred in killed and prisoners.
The siege was at once abandoned ; unaided by the proprietors, South Car-
olina had made a glorious defence.
In the spring of 1715 war broke out with the Yamassees. ^Vs
usual with their race, the Indians began hostilities with treachery. ^Vt
the very time when Captain Nairue was among them as a friendly ambas-
sador, the wily savages rose upon the frontier settlements and committed
an atrocious massacre. The people of Port Royal were alarmed just in
time to escape in a ship to Charleston. The desperate savages rushed on
to within a short distance of the capital. It seemed that the city would
be taken and the whole colony driven to destruction. But the brave
Charles Craven, governor of the province, rallied the militia of Colleton
district, and the blood-stained barbarians were driven back. A vigorous
pursuit began, and the savages were pressed to the banks of the Salke-
hatchie. Here a decisive battle was fought, and the Indians were com-
pletely routed. The Yamassees collected their shattered tribe and retired
into Florida, where they were received by the Spaniards as friends and
confederates.
In 1719 the government of South Carolina was revolutionized.
At the close of the war with the Yamassees the assembly petitioned the
proprietors to bear a portion of the expense. But the avaricious noble-
men refused, and would take no measures for the future protection of the
SOUTH CAROLINA. 237
colony. The people were greatly burdened with rents and taxes. The
lands were mono])olized ; every act of the assembly which seemed for the
public good was vetoed by the proprietors. In the new election every
delegate was chosen by the popular party. The 21st of December was
training-day in Charleston. On that day James Moore, the new chief
magistrate elected by the people, was to be inaugurated. Governor John-
son forbade the military display and tried to prevent the inauguration ;
but the militia collected in the public square, drums were beaten, flags
were flung out on the forts and shipping, and before nightfall the propri-
etary government of Carolina was overtlu-own. Governor Moore was
duly inaugurated in the name of King George I. A colonial agent was
at once sent to England ; the cause of the colonists was heard, and the
forfeited charter of the proprietors abrogated by act of Parliament.
Francis Nicholson was now commissioned as governor. He had
already held the office of chief magistrate in New York, in Virginia, in
Maryland and in Nova Scotia. He began a successful administration in
South Carolina by concluding treaties of peace and commerce with the
Cherokees and the Creeks. But another and final change in colonial
aflairs was now at hand. In 1729 seven of the eight proprietors of the
Carolinas sold their entire claims in the provinces to the king. Lord
Carteret, the eighth proprietor, would surrender nothing but his right of
jurisdiction, reserving his share in the soil. The sum paid by King
George for the two colonies was twenty-two thousand five hundred pounds
sterling. Royal governors were appointed, and the affairs of the province
were settled on a permanent basis, not to be disturbed for more than forty
years.
The people who colonized South Carolina were brave and chival-
rous. On the banks of the Santee, the Edisto and the Combahee were
gathered some of the best elements of the European nations. The Hu-
guenot, the Scotch Presbyterian, the EngHsh dissenter, the loyalist and
High Churchman, the Irish adventurer and the Dutch mechanic, com-
posed the powerful material out of which soon grew the beauty and re-
nown of the Palmetto State. Equally with the rugged Puritans of
the North, the South Carolinians were lovers of liberty. Without the
severe morality and formal manners of the Pilgrims, the people who were
once governed by the peacefi^il Archdale and once led to war by the gallant
Craven became the leaders in courtly politeness and high-toned honor be-
tween man and man. In the coming struggle for freedom South Caro-
lina will bear a noble and distinguished part ; tlie fame of the patriotic
R.hett will be perpetuated by Marion and Sumter.
238 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XXIX.
GEORGIA.
aEORGIA, the thirteenth American colony, was founded in a spirit
of pure benevolence. The laws of England permitted imprisonment
for debt. Thousands of English laborers, who through misfortune and
thoughtless contracts had become indebted to the rich, were annually ar-
rested and thrown into jail. There were desolate and starving families.
The miserable condition of the debtor class at last attracted the attention
of Parliament. In 1728 a commissioner was appointed, at his own request,
to look into the state of the poor, to visit the prisons of the kingdom, and
to report measures of relief. The work was accomplished, the jails were
opened, and the poor victims of debt returned to their homes.
The noble commissioner was not yet satisfied. For the liberated
prisoners and their friends were disheartened and disgraced in the country
of their birth. Was there no land beyond the sea where debt was not a
crime, and where poverty was no disgrace ? To provide a refuge for the
down-trodden poor of England and the distressed Protestants of other
countries, the commissioner now appealed to George II. for the privilege
of planting a colony in America. The petition was favorably heard, and
on the 9th of June, 1732, a royal charter was issued by which the terri-
tory between the Savannah and Altamaha Rivers, and westward from the
upper fountains of those rivers to the Pacific, was organized and granted
to a corporation for twenty-one years, to be held in trust for the poor. In
honor of the king, the new province received the name of Georgia.
But what was the name of that high-souled, unselfish commissioner of
Parliament ?
James Oglethorpe, the philanthropist. Born a loyalist, educated at
Oxford, a High Churchman, a cavalier, a soldier, a member of Parliament,
benevolent, generous, full of sympathy, far-sighted, brave as John Smith,
chivalrous as De Soto, Oglethorpe gave in middle life the full energies of
a vigorous body and a loft}' mind to the work of building in the sunny
South an asylum for the oppressed of his own and other lands. The
raagnaniraity of the enterprise was heightened by the fact that he did not
believe in the equality of men, but only in the right and duty of the strong
to protect the weak and sympathize with the lowly. To Oglethorpe, as
GEORGIA.
239
principal member of the corporation, the leadership of the first colony to
be planted on the banks of the Savannah, was naturally entrusted.
By the mid-
dle of November a
hundred and twen-
ty emigrants were
ready to sail for
the New World.
Oglethorpe, like
the elder Win-
throp, determined
to share the dan-
gers and hardships
of his colony. In
January of 1733
the company was
welcomed at
Charleston. Pass-
ing down the coast,
the vessels were
anchored for a
short time at Beau-
fort, while the gov-
ernor with a few
companions as-
cended the bound-
aiy river of Georgia, and selected as the site of his settlement the high
bluff on which now stands the city of Savannah. Here, on the 1st day of
February, were laid the foundations of the oldest English town south of
the Savannah River. Broad streets were laid out ; a public square was
reserved in each quarter ; a beautiful village of tents and board houses,
built among the pine trees, appeared as the capital of a new common-
wealth where men were not imprisoned for debt.
Tomo-chichi, chief of the Yamacraws, came from his cabin, half a
mile distant, to see his brother Oglethorpe. There was a pleasant con-
ference. " Here is a present for you," said the red man to the white man.
The present was a buffalo robe painted on the inside with the head and
feathers of an eagle. " The feathers are soft, and signify love ; the buf-
falo skin is the emblem of protection. Therefore love us and protect us,"
said the old chieftain. Such a plea could not be lost on a man like Ogle-
thorpe. Seeing the advantages of peace, he sent an invitation to the chiefs
JAMES OGLETHORPE.
240 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the Muskhogees to meet him in a general council at his capital. The
conference was held on the 29th of May. Long King, the sachem of
Oconas, spoke for all the tribes of his nation. The English were wel-
comed to the country. Bundles of buckskins, and such other good gifts
as savage civilization could offer, were laid down plentifully at the feet
of the whites. The governor and his poor but generous colony responded
with valuable presents and words of faithful friendship. The fame of
Oglethorpe spread far and wide among the Red men. From the distant
mountains of Tennessee came the noted chief of the Cherokees to confer
with the humane and sweet-tempered governor of Georgia.
The councilors in England who managed the affairs of the new
State encouraged emigration with every liberal offer. Swiss peasants left
their mountains to find a home on the Savannah. The plaid cloak of the
Scotch Highlander was seen among the wigwams of the Muskhogees.
From distant Salzburg, afar on the borders of Austria, came a noble col-
ony of German Protestants, singing their way down the Rhine and across
the ocean. Oglethorpe met them at Charleston, bade them \A'elcome, led
them to Savannah and thence through the woods to a point twenty miles
up the river, told them of English rights and the freedom of conscience,
and left them to found the viliao;e of Ebenezer.
In April of 1734, Governor Oglethorpe made a visit to England.
His friend Tomo-chichi went with him, and made the acquaintance of
King George. It was said in London that no colony was ever before
founded so wisely and well as Georgia. The councilors prohibited the
importation of rum. Traffic with the Indians — always a dangerous mat-
ter— was either interdicted or regulated by special Hcense. When it came
to the question of labor, slavery was positively forbidden. It was said
that the introduction of slaves would be fatal to the interests of the Eng-
lish and German laborers for whom the colony had been founded. While
the governor was still abroad, the first company of INIoravians, number-
ing nine, and led by the evangelist Spangenberg, arrived at Savannah.
In February of 1736, Oglethorpe himself came back with a new
colony of three hundred. Part of these were JMoravians, and nearly all
were peojile of deep piety and fervent spirit. First among them — first
in zeal and first in the influence which he was destined to exert in after
times — was the celebrated John Wesley, the founder of Methodism.
Overflowing with religious enthusiasm, he came to Georgia, not as a poli-
tician, not as a minister merely, but as an apostle. To lead the people to
righteousness, to spread the gospel, to convert the Indians, and to intro-
duce a new type of religion characterized by few forms and much emo-
tion, these were the purposes that thronged his lofty fancy. He was
GEORGIA. 241
doomed to much disappointment. The mixed people of the new province
could not be moulded to his will ; and after a residence of less than two
years he left the colony with a troubled spirit. His brother, Charles
Wesley, came also as a secretary to Governor Oglethorpe; but Charles
was a poet, a timid and tender-hearted man who pined with homesickness
and gave way under discouragement. But when, in 1738, the famous
George Whitefield came, his robust and daring nature proved a match for
all the troubles of the wilderness. He preached with fiery eloquence.
To build an orphan-house at Savannah he went through all the colonies ;
and those who heard his voice could hardly refuse him money. Think-
ing no longer of native land, he found a peaceful grave in New England.
Meanwhile, Oglethorpe was busy with the affairs of his growing
province. Anticipating war with Spain, he began to fortify. For the
Spaniards were in possession of Florida, and claimed the country as far
north as St. Helena Sound. All of Georgia was thus embraced in the
Spanish claim. But Oglethorpe had a charter for Georgia as far south
as the Altamaha, and he had secured by treaty with the Indians all the
territory between that river and the St. Marj^'s. In 1736 he ascended
the Savannah and built a fort at Augusta. On the north bank of the
Altamaha, twelve miles from its mouth, Fort Darien was built. On
Cumberland Island, at the mouth of the St. Mary's, a fortress was erected
and named Fort William. Proceeding down the coast with a company
of Highlanders, the daring governor reached the mouth of the St. John's,
and on Amelia Island built still another fort, which he named St. George.
The river St. John's was claimed from this time forth as the southern
boundary of Georgia. To make his preparations complete, the governor
again visited England, and was commissioned as brigadier-general, with a
command extending over his own province and South Carolina. In Octo-
ber of 1737 he returned to Savannah, bringing with him a regiment of
six hundred men. Such were the vigorous measures adopted by Ogle-
thorpe in anticipation of a Spanish war.
The war came. It was that conflict known in American history as
King George's War. England published her declaration of hostility
against Spain in the latter part of October, 1739. In the first week of
the following January the impetuous Oglethorpe, at the head of the
Georgia militia, made a dash into Florida, and captured two fortified towns
of the Spaniards. His plans embraced the conquest of St. Augustine and
the entire extinction of Spanish authority north of the Gulf of Mexico.
Repairing to Charleston, he induced the assembly to support his measures.
By the first of May he found himself in command of six hundred regular
troops, four hundred volunteers and a body of Indian auxiliaries. With
16
242
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
this force he proceeded at once against St. Augustine. The place was
strongly fortified, and the Spanish commandant, Monteano, was a man of
ability and courage. The siege continued for five weeks, but ended in
disaster to the English. For a while the town was successfully block-
aded ; but some Spanish galleys, eluding the vigilance of Oglethorpe's
squadron, brought a cargo of supplies
to the garrison. The Spaniards made
a sally, attacked a company of High-
landers, and dispersed them. Sickness
prevailed in the English camp. The
general himself was enfeebled with fever
and excitement, but he held on like a
hero. The troops of CaroKna, disheart-
ened and despairing of success, left their
camp and marched homeward. The
English vessels gathered up their crews,
abandoned the siege and returned to
Frederica. Oglethorpe, yielding only
to necessity, collected his men from the
trenches and withdrew into Georgia.
The Spaniards now determined
to carry the war northward and drive
the English beyond the Savannah. The
Combahee River should be made the
Jl- northern boundary of Florida. Prep-
COUNTRY OF THE SAVANNAH, 1740.
arations began on a vast scale. A pow-
erful fleet of thirty-six vessels, carrying more than three thousand troops,
was brought from Cuba, and anchored at St. Augustine. In June of
1742 the squadron passed up the coast to Cumberland Island, and at-
tempted the reduction of Fort William. But Oglethorpe by a daring
exploit reinforced the garrison, and then fell back to Frederica. The
Spanish vessels followed and came to anchor in the harbor of St. Simon's.
From the southern point of the island to Frederica, Oglethorpe had cut a
road which at one place lay between a morass and a dense forest. Along
this path the Spaniards must pass to attack the town. The English gen-
eral had only eight hundred men and a few Indian allies. In order to
cope with superior numbers, Oglethorpe resorted to stratagem.
A Frenchman had deserted to the Spaniards. To him the English
general now wrote a letter as if to a spy. *• A Spanish prisoner in Ogle-
thorpe's hands was liberated and bribed to deliver the letter to the de-
serter. The Frenchman was advised that two British fleets were coming
GEORGIA. 243;
to America, one to aid Oglethorpe and the other to attack St. Augustine,
Let the Spaniards remain on the island but three days longer, and they
would be ruined. If the enemy did not make an immediate attack on
Frederica, his forces would be captured to a man. Oglethorpe knew very
well that the prisoner, instead of delivering this letter to the deserter,,
would give it to the Spanish commander, and that the Spanish commander
could not possibly know whether the communication was the truth or a
fiction. This letter was delivered, and the astonished Frenchman was
arrested as a spy, but the Spaniards could not tell whether his denial was
true or false. There was a council of war in the Spanish camp. Ogle-
thorpe's stratagem was suspected, but could not be proved. Three ships
had been seen at sea that day ; perhaps these were the first vessels of the
approaching British ?LQe\s. The Spaniards were utterly perplexed; but
it was finally decided to take Oglethorpe's advice, and make the attack
on Frederica.
The English general had foreseen that this course would be adopted.
He had accordingly advanced his small force from the town to the place
where the road passed between the swamp and the forest. Here an am-
buscade was formed, and the soldiers lay in wait for the approaching Span-
iards. On the 7th of July the enemy's vanguard reached the narrow pass,
were fired on from the thicket and driven back in confusion. The main
body of the Spanish forces pressed on into the dangerous position where
superior numbers were of no advantage. The Highlanders of Oglethorpe's
regiment fired with terrible eifect from the oak woods by the roadside.
The Spaniards stood firm for a while, but were presently driven back with
a loss of two hundred men. Not without reason the name of Bloody
Marsh was given to this battle-field. Within less than a week the whole
Spanish force had re-embarked and sailed for Florida. On the way south-
ward the fleet made a second attack on Fort William. But Captain Stuart,
with a garrison of only fifty men, made a vigorous and successful defence.
The English watched the retreating ships beyond the mouth of the St.
John's ; before the last of July the great invasion was at an end. The
Spanish authorities of Cuba were greatly chagrined at the failure of the
expedition. The commander of the squadron was arrested, tried by a
court-martial and dismissed from the service.
The commonwealth of Georgia was now firmly established, and the
settlements had peace. In 1743, Oglethorpe bade a final adieu to the col-
ony to whose welfare he had given more than ten years of his life. He
had never owned a house nor possessed an acre of ground within the lim-
its of his own province. He now departed for England crowned with
blessings, and leaving behind him an untarnished fame. James Ogle-
244 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
tliorpe lived to be nearly a hundred years old; benevolence, integrity and
honor were the virtues of his declining years. But the new State which
he had founded in the West was not always free from evils.
For the regulations wliich the councilors for Georgia had adopted
were but poorly suited to the wants of the colony. The settlers had not
been permitted to hold their lands in fee simple. Agriculture had not
flourished. Commerce had not sprung up. The laws of property had
been so arranged that estates could descend only to the oldest sons of fam-
ilies. The colonists were poor, and charged their poverty to the fact that
slave-labor was forbidden in the province. This became the chief ques-
tion which agitated the people. The proprietary laws grew more and
more unpopular. The statute excluding slavery was not rigidly enforced,
and, indeed, could not be enforced, when the people had determined to
evade it. Whitefield himself jjleaded for the abrogation of the law.
Slaves began to be hired, first for short terms of service, then for longer
periods, then for a hundred years, which was equivalent to an actual pur-
chase for life. Finally, cargoes of slaves were brought directly from
Africa, and the primitive free-labor system of Georgia was revolutionized.
Plantations were laid out below the Savannah, and cultivated, as those of
South Carolina.
Another and more important change was at hand. It became
evident that there could be no progress so long as the original char-
ter remained in force. However benevolent the impulse which had
called Georgia into being, the scheme of government had proved a
sham. The people were improvident, idle, inexperienced. More than
six hundred thousand dollars in parliamentary grants, besides private
contributions amounting to nearly ninety thousand dollars, had been
fruitlessly expended on the lagging province. In 1752 there were
only a few scattered plantations and three inconsiderable villages be-
low the Savannah. The white population amounted, at this time, to
seventeen hundred souls ; and the blacks numbered about four hun-
dred. The industry of Georgia was at a stand-still. The extravagant
hopes wliich the colonial managers had entertained of wine, and silk,
and indigo, found no realization in the facts. The annual exports of
the colony amounted to less than four thousand dollars ; and the pros-
pect for the future was as discouraging as the present condition was
gloomy.
At last, however, the new order of things was acknowledged by
the councilors of the province. They yielded to necessity. In June
«f 1752, just twenty years from the granting of the charter, the trust-
ees made a formal surrender of their patent to the king. A royal
GEORGIA. 245
government was established over the country south of the Savannah,
and the people were granted the privileges and freedom of English-
men. A constitution was drawn up by the British Board of Trade,
and Captain John Reynolds was commissioned as royal governor. In
October of 1754 he arrived at Savannah and began the work of reor-
ganization. For two years and a half he labored assiduously to ex-
tricate the affairs of Georgia from the confusion into which they had
fallen ; and so successful was his work that at the end of this time
the population had reached six thousand. The southern boundary of
the province remained to be decided by the issue of the French and
Indian War. During the progress of that conflict Georgia was saved
from calamity by the prudent administration of Governor Ellis, who
secured from the powerful Creek confederacy a new treaty of peace.
A barrier was thus interposed between the colony and the hostile
nations of the West and North. In the year 1758 the province was
divided into eight parishes, and at the same time the Church of Eng-
land was established by law. Still, for a while, the progress of the
colony was not equal to the expectations of its founder. But before
the beginning of the Revolution, Georgia, though the feeblest of all
the Anglo-American provinces, had become a prosperous and growing
State.
Such is the story of the planting by our fathers of the Old Thir-
teen republics — such the record of their growth and prospects. From
the gloomy coast of Labrador, where, two hundred and fifty years be-
fore, John Cabot had set up the flag of England and arms of Henry
VII., to the sunny waters where Ponce de Leon, looking shoreward,
called his cavaliers to gaze on the Land of Flowers, — the dominion
of Great Britain had been established. Would that dominion last
forever? Would the other nations of Europe ever rally and regain
their lost ascendency on the Western continent? Would the ties of
kinship, the affinity of language, the bond of a common ancestry,
stretching from these sea-shore commonwealths across the Atlantic,
bind them in perpetual union with the mother Islands ? Would these
isolated provinces in America — now so quick to take offence at each
other's beliefs and actions, and so easily jealous of each other's power
and fame — ever unite in a common cause ? ever join to do battle for
life and liberty? ever become a Nation? Such were the momentous
questions, the problems of destiny, which hung above the colonies at
246 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the middle of the eighteenth century — problems which the future
<30uld not be long in solving.
The history of these American colonies from their first feeble be-
ginnings is full of interest and instruction. The people who laid the
foundations of civilization in the New World were nearly all refugees,
exiles, wanderers, pilgrims. They were urged across the ocean by a
common impulse, and that impulse was the desire to escape from som^
form of oppression in the Old World. Sometimes it was the oppres-
sion of the Church, sometimes of the State, sometimes of society. Iq
the wake of the emigrant ship there was always tyranny. Men loved,
freedom ; to find it they braved the perils of the deep, traversed the
solitary forests of Maine, built huts on the bleak shores of New Eng-
land, entered the Hudson, explored the Jerseys, found shelter in the
Chesapeake, met starvation and death on the banks of the James, were
buffeted by storms around the capes of Carolina, built towns by the
estuaries of the great rivers, made roads through the pine-woods, and
carried the dwellings of men to the very margin of the fever-haunted
swamps of the South. It is all one story — the story of the human rac^
seeking for liberty.
COLONIAL HISTORY.— Continued.
FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR.
CHAPTER XXX.
CAUSES.
THE time came when the American colonies began to act together.
From the beginning they had been kept apart by prejudice, suspi-
cion and mutual jealousy. But the fathers were now dead, old antago-
nisms had passed away, a new generation had arisen with kindlier feel-
ings and more charitable sentiments. But it was not so much the growth
of a more liberal public opinion as it was the sense of a common dangefi
that at last led the colonists to make a united effort. The final struggle
between France and England for colonial supremacy in America was
at hand. Necessity compelled the English colonies to join in a com-
mon cause against a common foe. This is the conflict known as the
French and Indian War ; with this great event the separate histories
of the colonies are lost in the more general history of the nation. The
contest began in 1754, but the causes of the war had existed for many
years.
The first and greatest of these causes was the conflicting territorial
claims of the two nations. England had colonized the sea-coast ; France
had colonized the interior of the continent. From Maine to Florida the
Atlantic shore was spread with English colonies; but there were no inland
settlements. The great towns were on the ocean's edge. But the claims
of England reached far beyond her colonies. Based on the discoveries
of the Cabots, and not limited by actual occupation, those claims extended
westward to the Pacific. In making grants of territory the English
kings had always proceeded upon the theory that the voyage of Sebastian
Cabot had given to England a lawful right to the country from one ocean
to the other. Far different, however, were the claims of France ; the
French had first colonized the valley of the St. Lawrence. Montreal, one
(247)
248 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the earliest settlements, is more than five hundred miles from the sea,
If the French colonies had been limited to the St. LawTence and its trib-
utaries, there would have been little danger of a conflict about territorial
dominion. But in the latter half of the seventeenth century the French
began to push their waj westward and southward ; first, along the shores
of the great lakes, then to the head-waters of the Wabash, the Illinois,
the Wisconsin and the St. Croix, then down these streams to the Missis-
sippi, and then to the Gulf of Mexico. The purpose of the French, as
manifested in these movements, was no less than to divide the American
continent and to take the larger portion, to possess the land for France
and for Catholicism. For it was the work of the Jesuit missionaries.
So important and marvelous are those early movements of the French in
the valley of the Mississippi that a brief account of the leading explora-
tions may here be given.
The zealous Jesuits, purposing to extend the Catholic faith to all
lands and nations, set out fearlessly from the older settlements of the St.
Lawrence to explore the unknown AVest, and to convert the barbarous
races. In 1641, Charles Raymbault, the first of the French missionary
explorers, passed through the northern straits of Lake Huron and entered
Lake Superior. In the thirty years that followed, the Jesuits continued
their explorations with prodigious activity. Missions were established at
various points north of the lakes, and in Michigan, Wisconsin and Illi-
nois. In 1673, Joliet and Marquette passed from the head-waters of
Fox River over the watershed to the upper tributaries of the Wisconsin,
and thence down that river in a seven days' voyage to the Mississippi.
For a full month the canoe of the daring adventurers carried them on
toward the sea. They passed the mouth of Arkansas River, and reached
the limit of their voyage at the thirty-third parallel of latitude. Turn-
ing their boat up stream, they entered the mouth of the Illinois and
returned by the site of Chicago into Lake Michigan, and thence to De-
troit. But it was not yet known whether the great river discharged its
flood of waters into the southern gulf or into the Pacific Ocean.
It remained for Robert de la Salle, most illustrious of the French
explorers, to solve the problem. This courageous and daring man was
living at the outlet of Lake Ontario when the news of Marquette's
voyage reached Canada. Fired with the passion of discovery, La Salle
birilt and launched the first ship above Niagara Falls. He sailed west-
ward through Lake Erie and Lake Huron, anchored in Green Bay,
crossed Lake Michigan to the mouth of the St. Joseph, ascended that
stream with a few companions, traversed the country to the upper Kanka-
kee, and dropped down with the current into the Illinois. Here disas-
CAUSES. 24^
fers overtook the expedition, and La Salle was obliged to return on foot
to Fort Frontenac, a distance of nearly a thousand miles. During his-
absence, Father Hennepin, a member of the company, traversed Illinois^
and explored the Mississippi as high as the Falls of St. Anthony.
In 1681, La Salle returned to his station on the Illinois, bringing
men and supplies. A boat was built and launched, and early in the
following year the heroic adventurer, with a few companions, descended
the river to its junction with the Mississippi, and was borne by the
Father of Waters to the Gulf of Mexico. It was one of the greatest
exploits of modern times. The return voyage was successfully accom-
plished. La Salle reached Quebec, and immediately set sail for France.
The kingdom was greatly excited, and vast plans were made for coloniz-
ing the valley of the Mississippi. In July of 1684 four ships, bearing
two hundred and eighty emigrants, left France. Beaujeu commanded
the fleet, and La Salle was leader of the colony. The plan was to enter
the gulf, ascend the river, and plant settlements on its banks and tributa-
ries. But Beaujeu was a bad and headstrong captain, and against La
Salle's entreaties the squadron was carried out of its course, beyond the
mouths of the Mississippi, and into the Bay of Matagorda. Here a
landing was effected, but the store-ship, with all its precious freightage,
was dashed to pieces in a storm. Nevertheless, a colony was established,
and Texas became a part of Louisiana.
La Salle made many unsuccessful efforts to rediscover the Missis-
sippi. One misfortune after another followed fast, but the leader's reso-
lute spirit remained tranquil through all calamities. At last, with sixteen
companions, he set out to cross the continent to Canada. The march .
began in January of 1687, and continued for sixty days. The wanderers
were already in the basin of the Colorado. Here, on the 20th of March,
while La Salle was at some distance from the camp, two conspirators of
the company, hiding in the prairie grass, took a deadly aim at the
famous explorer, and shot him dead in his tracks. Only seven of the
adventurers succeeded in reaching a French settlement oh the Mis-
sissippi.
France was not slow to occupy the vast country revealed to her
by the activity of the Jesuits. As early as 1688 military posts had
been established at Frontenac, at Niagara, at the Straits of Mackinaw,
and on the Illinois River. Before the middle of the eighteenth century,
permanent settlements had been made by the French on the Maumee, at
Detroit, at the mouth of the river St. Joseph, at Green Bay, at Yincennes
on the Lower Wabash, on the Mississippi at the mouth of the Kaskas-
kia, at Fort Rosalie, the present site of Natchez, and on the Gulf of
250 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Mexico at the head of the Bay of Eiloxi. At this time the only outposts
of ths English colonies were a small fort at Oswego, on Lake Ontario,
and a few scattered cabins in West Virginia. It only remained for
France to occupy the valley of Ohio, in order to confine the provinces of
Great Britain to the country east of the Alleghanies. To do this became
the sole ambition of the French, and to prevent it the stubborn purpose
of the English.
A second cause of war existed in the long-standing national animos-
ity of France and England. The two nations could hardly remain at
peace. The French and the English were of different races, languages
and laws. For more than two centuries France had been the leader of
the Catholic, and England of the Protestant, powers of Europe. Religious
prejudice intensified the natural jealousy of the two nations. Rivalry
prevailed on land and sea. When, at the close of the seventeenth century,
it was seen that the people of the English colonies outnumbered those of
Canada by nearly twenty to one, France was filled with envy. When,
by the enterprise of the Jesuit missionaries, the French began to dot the
basin of the Mississippi with fortresses, and to monopolize the fur-trade
of the Indians, England could not conceal her wrath. It was only a
question of time when this unreasonable jealousy would bring on a colo-
nial war.
The third and immediate cause of hostilities was a conflict between
the frontiersmen of the two nations in attempting to colonize the Ohio
valley. The year 1749 witnessed the beginning of difficulties. For
some time the strolling traders of Virginia and Pennsylvania had fre-
quented the Indian towns on the upper tributaries of the Ohio. Now the
traders of Canada began to visit the same villages, and to compete with
the English in the purchase of furs. Virginia, under her ancient char-
ters, claimed the whole country lying between her western borders and
the southern shores of Lake Erie. The French fur-gatherers in this dis-
trict were regarded as intruders not to be tolerated. In order to prevent
further encroachment, a number of prominent Virginians joined them-
selves together in a body called the Ohio Company, with a view to
the immediate occupation of the disputed territory. Robert Dinwiddle,
governor of the State, Lawrence and Augustus Washington, and Thomas
Lee, president of the Virginia council, were the leading members of the
corporation. In March of 1749 the company received from George II.
an extensive land-grant covering a tract of five hundred thousand acres,
to be located between the Kanawha and the Monongahela, or on the
northern bank of the Ohio. The conditions of the grant were that the
Jands should be held free of rent for ten years, that within seven years a
CAUSES. 251
colony of one hundred families should be established in the district, and
that the territory should be immediately selected.
But the French were equally active. Before the Ohio Company
could send out a colony, the governor of Canada despatched Bienville
with three hundred men to explore and occupy the valley of the Ohio.
The expedition was successful. Plates of lead bearing French inscrip-
tions were buried here and there on both banks of the river, the region was
•explored as far west as the towns of the Miamis, the English traders were
expelled from the country, and a letter was written to Governor Hamil-
ton of Pennsylvania admonishing him to encroach no farther on the
territory of the king of France. This work occupied the summer and
fall of 1749. In the mean time, the Ohio Company had equipped an
exploring party, and placed it under command of Christopher Gist. In
November of 1750 he and his company reached the Ohio opposite the
mouth of Beaver Creek. Here the expedition crossed to the northern
side, tarried at Logstown, passed down the river through the several
Indian confederacies to the Great Miami, and thence to within fifteen
miles of the falls at Louisville. Returning on foot through Kentucky,
the explorers reached Virginia in the spring of 1751.
This expedition was followed by still more vigorous movements on
the part of the French. Descending from their headquarters at Presque
Isle, now Erie, on the southern shore of the lake, they built a fortress
called Le Boeuf, on French Creek, a tributary of the Alleghany. Pro-
ceeding down the stream to its junction with the river, they erected a
second fort, named Venango. From this point they advanced against a
British post on the Miami, broke up the settlement, made prisoners of
the garrison and carried them to Canada. The king of the Miami con-
federacy, who had assisted the English in defending their outpost, was
inhumanly murdered by the Indian allies of the French. About the
same time the country south of the Ohio, between the Great Kanawha
and the Monongahela, was explored by Gist and a party of armed sur-
veyors, acting under orders of the company. In the summer of 1753 the
English opened a road from Will's Creek through the mountains into the
Ohio valley, and a colony of eleven families was planted on the Youghi-
ogheny, just west of Laurel Hill. It was impossible that a conflict be-
tween the advancing settlements of the two nations could be much longer
averted.
The Indian nations were greatly alarmed at the threatening pros-
pect. Solemn councils were held among all the tribes, and the affairs of
the race were gravely discussed by the copper-colored orators. From the
first the Red men rather favored the English cause, but their allegiance
252 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
was wavering and uncertain. After the murder of the Miami chieftain
their hostility to the French became more decided. When, in the spring
of 1753, the news was borne to the council-fires on the Ohio that Du
Quesne, the governor of Canada, had despatched a company of twelve
hundred men to descend the Alleghany and colonize the country, the
jealousy of the natives was kindled into open resistance. The tribes
most concerned were the Delawares, the Shawnees, the Miamis and the
Mingoes. The chieftain of this confederacy, named Tanacharisson, was
called the Half-King from the fact that his subjects, except the Miamis,
owed a kind of indefinite allegiance to the Iroquois or Six Nations. By
the authority of a great council held at Logstown the Half-King was now
sent to Erie to remonstrate with the French commandant against a further
invasion of the Indian country. " The land is mine, and I will have it,"
replied the Frenchman, with derision and contempt. The insulted
sachem returned to his nation to lift the hatchet against the enemies of
his people. It was at this time that the chiefs of many tribes met Benja-
min Franklin at the town of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and formed a treaty
of alliance with the English.
Virginia was now thoroughly aroused. But before proceeding to
actual hostilities. Governor Dinwiddle determined to try the effect of a
final remonstrance with the French. A paper M^as accordingly drawn up
setting forth the nature and extent of the English claim to the valley of
the Ohio, and solemnly warning the authorities of France against further
intrusion into that region. It was necessary that this paper should be
carried to General St. Pierre, now stationed at Erie as commander of the
French forces in the West. Who should be chosen to bear the important
parchment to its far-off destination ? It was the most serious mission
ever yet undertaken in America. A young surveyor, named George
Washington, was called to perform the perilous duty. Him the
governor summoned from his home on the Potomac and commissioned as
ambassador, and to him was committed the message which was to be
borne from Williamsburg, on York River, through the untrodden wilder-
ness to Presque Isle, on the shore of Lake Erie.
On the last day of October, 1753, Washington set out on his long
journey. He was attended by four comrades besides an interpreter and
Christopher Gist, the guide. The party arrived without accident at the
mouth of Will's Creek, the last important tributary of the Potomac on
the north. From this place Washington proceeded through the moun-
tains to the head-waters of the Youghiogheny, and thence down that
stream to the site of Pittsburg. The immense importance of this place»
lying at the confluence of the two great tributaries of the Ohio, and com-
CAUSES.
253
O R K
FIRST SCENE OF THE FRENCH AND
INDIAN WAR, 1750.
manding them both, was at once perceived by the young ambassador, who
noted the spot as the site of a fortress. Washington was now conducted
across the Alleghany by the chief of
the Delawares, and thence twenty
miles down the river to Logstown.
Here a council was held with the
Indians, who renewed their pledges
of friendship and fidelity to the Eng-
lish. The emissaries of the French
were already in the country trying
in every conceivable way to entice
the Red men into an alliance ; but
every proposal was rejected. In the
beginning of December, Washington
and his party moved northward to
the French post at Venango. The
officers of the fort took no pains to
conceal their purpose ; the project of
imiting Canada and Louisiana by
way of the Ohio valley was openly avowed.
From Venango, Washington set out through the forest to Fort le
Boeuf on French Creek, fifty miles above its junction with the Alleghany.
This was the last stage in the journey. It was still fourteen miles to
Presque Isle ; but St. Pierre, the French commander, had come down
ii'om that place to superintend the fortifications at Le Boeuf. Here the
conference was held. Washington was received with great courtesy,
but the general of the French refused to enter into any discussion on the
rights of nations. He was acting, he said, under military instructions
given by the governor of New France. He had been commanded by his
superior officer to eject every Englishman from the valley of the Ohio,
and he meant to carry out his orders to the letter. A firm but courteous
reply was returned to Governor Dinwiddle's message. France claimed
the country of the Ohio in virtue of discovery, exploration and occupa-
tion, and her claim should be made good by force of arms.
Washington was kindly dismissed, but not until he had noted with
keen anxiety the immense preparations which were making at Le Boeuf.
There lay a fleet of fifty birch-bark canoes and a hundred and seventy
boats of pine ready to descend the river to the site of Pittsburg. For the
French, as well as the English, had noted the importance of that spot,
and had determined to fortify it as soon as the ice should break in the
rivers. It was now the dead of M'inter. Washington returned to Ve-
254 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
nango, and then, with Gist as his sole companion, left the river and
struck into the woods. It was one of the most solitary marches ever
made by man. There in the desolate wilderness was the future President
of the United States. Clad in the robe of an Indian, with gun in hand
and knapsack strapped to his shoulders ; struggling through interminable
snows ; sleeping with frozen clothes on a bed of pine-brush ; breaking
through the treacherous ice of rapid streams ; guided by day by a pocket
compass, and at night by the North Star, seen at intervals through the
leafless trees ; fired at by a prowling savage from his covert not fifteen
steps away ; thrown from a raft into the rushing Alleghany ; escaping to
an island and lodging there until the river was frozen over ; plunging
again into the forest ; reaching Gist's settlement and then the Potomac, —
the strong-limbed young ambassador came back without wound or scar to
the capital of Virginia. For his flesh was not made to be torn with
bullets or to be eaten by the wolves. The defiant despatch of St. Pierre
was laid before Governor Dinwiddle, and the first public service of Wash-
ington was accomplished.
In the mean time, the Ohio Company had not been idle. About
mid-winter a party of thirty-three men had been organized and placed
under command of Trent, with orders to proceed at once to the source of
the Ohio and erect a fort. The company must have been marching to its
destination when Washington returned to Virginia. It was not far from
the middle of March, 1754, when Trent's party reached the confluence
of the Alleghany and the Monougahela, and built the first rude stockade
on the site of Pittsburg.* After all the threats and boasting of the
French, the English had beaten them and seized the key to the Ohio
valley.
But it was a short-lived triumph. As soon as the approaching
spring broke the ice-gorges in the Alleghany, the French fleet of boats,
already prepared at Venango, came sweeping down the river. It was in
vain for Trent with his handful of men to ofier resistance. Washington
had now been commissioned as lieutenant-colonel, and was stationed at
Alexandria to enlist recruits for the Ohio. A regiment of a hundred and
fifty men had been enrolled ; but it was impossible to bring succor to
Trent in time to save the post. On the 17th of April the little band of
Englishmen at the head of the Ohio surrendered to the enemy and with-
drew from the countr}^ The French immediately occupied the place,
felled the forest-trees, built barracks and laid the foundations of Fort
DU QuESNE. To recapture this place by force of arms Colonel Wash-
ington set out from Will's Creek in the early part of May, 1754. Nego-
* The accounts of this important event are very obscure and unsatisfactory.
CAMPAIGNS OF WASHINGTON AND BRADDOCK. 255-
tiations had failed ; remonstrance had been tried in vain ; the possession
of the disputed territory was now to be determined by the harsher methods-
of war.
CHAPTER XXXI.
CAMPAIGNS OF WASHINGTON AND BRADDOCK.
WASHINGTON now found himself in command of a little army oT
Virginians. His commission was brief and easily understood : To
construct a fort at the source of the Ohio ; to destroy whoever opposed
him in the work ; to capture, kill or repel all who interrupted the progress
of the English settlements in that country. In the month of April the
young commander left Will's Creek, but the march westward was slow
and toilsome. The men were obliged to drag their cannons. The roads
were miserable ; rain fell in torrents on the tentless soldiers ; rivers were
bridgeless ; provisions insufficient. All the while the faithful Half-King
was urging Washington by repeated despatches to hasten to the rescue of
the Red men.
On the 26th of May the English regiment reached the Great
Meadows. Here Washington was informed tliat a company of French
was on the march to attack him. The enemy had been seen on the
Youghiogheny only a few miles distant. A stockade was immediately
erected, to which the commander gave the appropriate name of Fort
Necessity. Ascertaining from the scouts of the Half-King that the French
company in the neighborhood was only a scouting-party, Washington,
after conference with the Mingo chiefs, determined to strike the first blow.
Two Indians followed the trail of the French, and discovered their hiding-
place in a rocky ravine. The English advanced cautiously, intending ta
surprise and capture the whole force ; but the French were on the alert,
saw the approaching soldiers and flew to arras. Washington with
musket in hand was at the head of his company, " Fire !" was the clear
coumiand that rang through the forest, and the first volley of a great war
went flying on its mission of death. The engagement was brief and
decisive. Jumonville, the leader of the French, and ten of his party were
killed, and twenty-one were made prisoners.
A month of precious time was now lost in delays. While Washing-
ton at Fort Necessity waited in vain for reinforcements, the French at.
^56 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. ■
Fort du Quesne were collecting in great numbers. One small company
of volunteers from South Carolina arrived at the English camp ; but the
captain was an arrogant blockhead who, having a commission from the
king, undertook to supersede Washington. The latter, with the Vir-
ginians, spent the time of waiting in cutting a road for twenty miles
across the rough country in the direction of Fort du Quesne. The In-
dians were greatly discouraged at the dilatory conduct of the colonies,
and the strong war-parties which had been expected to join Washington
from the Muskingum and the Miami did not arrive. His whole effect-
ive force scarcely numbered four hundred. Learning that the French
general De Yilliers was approaching with a large body of troops, besides
Indian auxiliaries, Washington deemed it prudent to fall back to Fort
Necessity. The Carolina captain, who had remained within the fortifica-
tions, had done nothing to strengthen the works, although there was the
greatest need.
The little fort stood in an open space, midway between two emi-
nences covered with trees. Scarcely were Washington's forces safe within
the enclosure, when on the 3d of July the regiment of De Villiers, num-
bering six hundred, besides the savage allies, came in sight, and surrounded
the fort. The French stationed themselves on the eminence, about sixty
yards distant from the stockade. From this position they could fire down
upon the English with fatal effect. Many of the Indians climbed into
the tree-tops, where they were concealed by the thick foliage. For nine
hours, during a rain-storm, the assailants poured an incessant shower of
balls upon the heroic band in the fort. Thirty of W^ashington's men
were killed, but his tranquil presence encouraged the rest, and the fire of
the French was returned with unabated vigor. At length De Villiers, fear-
ing that his ammunition would be exhausted, jjroposed a parley. Wash-
ington, seeing that it would be impossible to hold out much longer, ac-
cepted the honorable terms of capitulation which were offered by the
French general. On the 4th of July the English garrison, retaining all
its accoutrements, marched out of the little fort, so bravely defended, and
withdrew from the country. The whole valley of the Ohio remained in
undisturbed possession of the French.
Meanwhile, a congress of the American colonies had assembled at
Albany. The objects had in view were twofold : first, to renew the
treaty with the Iroquois confederacy ; and secondly, to stir up the colonial
authorities to some sort of concerted action against the French. The
Iroquois had wavered from the beginning of the war ; the recent reverses
of the English had not strengthened the loyalt}'^ of the Red men. As to
the French aggressions, something must be done speedily, or the flag of
CAMPAIGNS OF WASHINGTON AND BRADDOCK. 267
England could never be borne into the vast country west of the Alle-
glianies. The congress was not wanting in abilities of the highest order.
JN'o such venerable and dignified body of men had ever before assembled
on the American continent. There were Hutchinson of Massachusetts,
Hopkins of Rhode Island, Franklin of Pennsylvania, and others scarcely
less distinguished. After a few days' consultation, the Iroquois, but hall'
satisfied, renewed their treaty and departed. The chieftains were anxious
and uneasy lest, through inactivity and want of union on the part of the
colonies, the Six Nations should be left to contend alone with the power
of France.
The convention next took tij) the important question of uniting the
colonies in a common government. On the 10th day of July, Benjamin
Franklin laid before the commissioners the draft: of a federal constitu-
tion. His vast and comprehensive mind had realized the true condition
and wants of the country ; the critical situation of the colonies demanded
a central government. How else could revenues be raised, an army l^e
organized and the common welfare be provided for? According to the
proposed plan of union, Philadelphia, a central city, was to be the cap-
ital. It was urged in behalf of this clause that the delegates of New
Hampshire and Georgia, the colonies most remote, could reach the seat
of government in fifteen or twenty days ! Slow-going old patriots ! Tlic
chief executive of the new confederation was to be a governor-general
appointed and supported by the king. The legislative authority M^as
vested in a congress composed of delegates to be chosen triennially by the
general assemblies of the resi>ective provinces. Each colony should be
represented in proportion to its contributions to the general government,
but no colony should have less than two or more than seven represent-
atives in congress. With the governor was lodged the power of appoint-
ing all military officers and of vetoing objectionable laws. The appoint-
ment of civil officers, the raising of troops, the levying of taxes, the super-
intendence of Indian affairs, the regulation of commerce, and all the
general duties of government, belonged to congress. This body was to
convene once a year, to choose its own officers, and to remain in session
not longer than six weeks.*
Such was the constitution drafted by Franklin and adopted, not
without serious opposition, by the commissioners at Albany. It remained
for the colonies to ratify or reject the new scheme of government. Copies
of the proposed constitution were at once transmitted to the several colon-
ial capitals, and were everywhere received with disfavor ; in Connecticut,
rejected ; in Massachusetts, opposed; in New York, adopted with indiffer-
•".nce. The chief objection urged against the instrument was the power of
^"^ * See Apnendix C.
258 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
veto given to the governor-general. Nor did the new constitution fare
better in the mother country. The English board of trade rejected it
with disdain, saying that the froward Americans were trying to make a
government of their own. Meanwhile, the French were strengthening
their works at Crown Point and Fort Niagara, and rejoicing over their
success in Western Pennsylvania.
But the honor of England, no less than the welfare of her colonies,
was at stake, and Parliament came to the rescue. It was determined to
send a British army to America, to accept the service of such provincial
troops as the colonies might furnish, and to protect the frontier against
the aggressions of France. As yet there had been no declaration of war.
The ministers of the two nations kept assuring each other of peaceable
intentions ; but Louis XV. took care to send three thousand soldiers to
Canada, and the British government ordered General Edward Braddock
to proceed to America with two regiments of regulars. Early in 1755
the English armament arrived in the Chesapeake. On the 14th of April
Braddock met the governors of all the colonies in a convention at Alex-
andria. The condition of colonial affairs was fully discussed. It was
resolved, since peace existed, not to invade Canada, but to repel the
French on the western and northern frontier. The plans of four cam-
paigns were accordingly submitted and ratified. Lawrence, the governor
of Nova Scotia, was to complete the conquest of that province according to
the English notion of boundaries. Johnson of New York was to enroll
a force of volunteers and Mohawks in British pay, and to capture tlie
French post at Crown Point. Shirley of jMassachusetts was to equip a
regiment and drive the enemy from their fortress at Niagara. Last and
most important of all, Braddock himself as commander-in-chief was to
lead the main body of regulars against Fort du Quesne, retake that j)ost
and expel the French from the Ohio valley.
In the latter part of April the British general set out on his march
from Alexandria to Will's Creek. The name of the militarj'- post at the
mouth of this stream was now changed to Fort Cumberland. Braddock's
army numbered fully two thousand men. They were nearly all veterans
who had seen service in the wars of Europe. A few provincial troops
had joined the expedition ; two companies of volunteers, led by Colonel
Horatio Gates of New York, were among the number. Washington met
the army at Fort Cumberland, and became an aid-de-camp of Braddock.
The colonies would have assisted with large levies of recruits, had it not
been for the nature of the general's authority. It was prescribed in his
commission that the provincial captains and colonels should have no rank
"when ser\ang in connection with the British army. So odious was thia
CAMPAIGNS OF WASHINGTON AND BRADDOCK. 259
regulation that Washington had set the example of withdrawing from the
service ; patriotic motives and the wish of Virginia now induced him to
return and to accept a post of responsibility.
On the last day of May the march began from Fort Cumberland.
A select force of five hundred men was thrown forward to open the roads
in the direction of Fort du Quesne. Sir Peter Halket led the advance,
and Braddock followed with the main body. The army, marching in a
slender columUj was extended for four miles along the narrow and broken
road It was in vain that Washington pointed out the danger of am-
buscades and suggested the employment of scouting-parties. Braddock
was self-willed, arrogant, proud ; thoroughly skilled in the tactics of
European warfare, he could not bear to be advised by an inferior. The
sagacious Franklin had admonished him to move with caution ; but he
only replied that it was impossible for savages to make any impression on
His Majesty's regulars. Now, when Washington ventured to repeat the
advice, Braddock flew into a passion, strode up and down in his tent, and
said that it was high times when Colonel Buckskin could teach a British
general how to fight.
On the 19th of June, Braddock put himself at the head of twelve
hundred chosen troops and pressed forward more rapidly. Colonel Dun-
bar was left behind with the remainder of the army. On the 8th of July
the van reached the junction of the Youghiogheny and the Monongahela.
It was only twelve miles farther to Fort du Quesne, and the French gave
up the place as lost. On the next morning the English army advanced
along the Monongahela, and at noon crossed to the northern bank just
beyond the confluence of Turtle Creek. Still there was no sign of an
enemy. Colonel Thomas Gage was leading forward a detachment of three
hundred and fifty men. The road was but twelve feet wide ; the country
uneven and woody There was a dense undergrowth on either hand;
rocks and ravines ; a hill on the right and a dry hollow on the left. A
few guides were in the advance, and some feeble flanking-parties ; in the
rear came the general with the main division of the army, the artillery
and the baggage. All at once a quick and heavy fire was heard in the
front.
France was not going to give up Fort du Quesne without a strug-
gle. For two months the place had been receiving reinforcements ; still
the garrison was by no means able to cope with Braddock's army. Even
the Indians realized the disparity of the contest. It was with great diffi-
culty that, on the night before the battle, the commandant of the fort
induced the savages to join in the enterprise of ambuscading the British.
At last a force of two hundred and thirty French, led by Beaujeu and
260
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Dumas, and a body of six hundred and thirty-seven Indians set out from
Du Quesne with a view to harass and annoy the English rather than to
face them in a serious battle. It was the purpose of the French, Avho
were entirely familiar with the ground, to lay an ambuscade at a favor-
able point seven miles distant from the fort. They were just reaching
the selected spot and settling into ambush when the flanking-parties of
the English came in sight. The French fired ; the Indians yelled and
slunk into their hiding-places, and the battle began.
If Gage had at once thrown forward his forces to the support of
the guards, the day could have been
saved ; but he was confused and un-
decided. The flanking parties were
driven in, leaving their six-pounders
in the hands of the enemy. Gage's
men wavered, and were mixed in the
thickset underwood with a regiment
which Braddock had pushed forward
to the rescue. The confusion became
greater, and there were symptoms of
a panic. The men fired constantly,
but could see no enemy. Every
volley from the hidden foe flew with
deadly certainty into the crowded
ranks of the English. The rash but
brave general rushed to the front and
rallied his men with the energy of despair ; but it was all in vain. The
men stood huddled together like sheep, or fled in terror to the rear. The
forest was strewn with the dead ; the savages, emboldened by their unex-
pected success, crept farther and farther along the flanks; and the battle
became a rout. Braddock had five horses shot under him ; his secretary
was killed ; both his English aids were disabled ; only Washington re-
mained to distribute orders. Out of eighty-two ofiicers twenty-six were
killed and thirty-seven wounded. Of the privates seven hundred and
fourteen were dead or bleeding with wounds. At last the general re-
ceived a ball in his right side and sank fainting to the ground. "What
shall we do now, colonel ?" said he to Washington, who came to his assist-
ance. " Retreat, sir — retreat by all means," replied the young hero, upon
whom everything now depended. His own bosom had been for more
than two hours a special target for the savages. Two horses had fallen
under him, and fo;ir times his coat had been torn with balls. A Shawnee
chief singled him out and bade his warriors do tlio same; bv.t tholv \'oiycys
SCENE OF BRADDOCK'S DEFEAT. 1755.,
RUIN OF ACADIA. 261
went by harmless. The retreat began at once, and the thirty Virginians,
who, with Washington, were all that remained alive, covered the flight of
the ruined army. The artillery, provisions, baggage and private paj)ers
of the general were left on the field.
The losses of the French and Indians were slight, amounting to
three officers and thirty men killed, and as many others wounded. There
was no attempt made at pursuit. The savages fairly reveled in the spoils
of the battle-field. They had never known so rich a harvest of scalps
and booty. The tawny chiefs returned to Fort du Quesne clad in the
laced coats, military boots and cockades of the British officers. The
jiying Braddock was borne in the train of the fugitives. Once he roused
himself to say, " Who would have thought it ?" and again, " We shall
better know how to deal with them another time." On the evening of
the fourth day he died, and was buried by the roadside a mile west of Fort
Necessity. When the fugitives reached Dunbar's camp, the confusion was
greater than ever. Dunbar was a man of feeble capacity and no courage ;
pretending to have the orders of the dying general, he proceeded to de-
stroy the remaining artillery, the heavy baggage, and all the public stores,
to the value of a hundred thousand pounds. Then followed a precipitate
retreat to Fort Cumberland, and then an abandonment of that place for
the safer precincts of Philadelphia. It was only the beginning of Auguet,
yet Dunbar pleaded the necessity of finding winter quarters for his forces,
fne great expedition of Braddock had ended in such a disaster as spread
»consternation and gloom over all the colonies.
CHAPTER XXXII.
RUIN OF ACADIA.
BY the treaty of Utrecht, made in 1713, the province of Acadia, or Nova
Scotia, was ceded by France to England. During the following fifty
years the <;olony remained under the dominion of Great Britain, and was
ruled by English officers. But the great majority of the people were
French, and the English government amounted only to a military occu-
pation of the peninsula. The British colors, floating over Louisburg and
Annapolis, and the presence of British garrisons here and there, were the
only tokens that this, the oldest French colony in America, had passed
under the control nf foreifrner?.
262
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
At the time of the cession the population amounted to about three
thousand ; by the outbreak of the French and Indian War the number
had increased to more than sixteen thousand. Lawrence, the deputy-
governor of the province, pretended to fear an insurrection. When Brad-
dock and the colonial governors convened at Alexandria, it was urged
tliat something must be done to overawe the French and strengthen the
English authority in Acadia. The enterprise of reducing the French
peasants to complete humiliation was entrusted to Lawrence, who was
to be assisted by a British fleet under Colonel Monckton, On the 20th of
May, 1755, the squadron, with tluree thousand troops, sailed from Boston
for the Bay of Fundy.
Tlie French had but two fortified posts in the province ; both of
these were on the isthmus which divides Nova Scotia from New Bruns-
wick. The first and most important fortress, named Beau-Sejour, was sit-
uated near the mouth of Messagouche
Creek, at the head of Chignecto Bay.
The other fort, a mere stockade called
Gaspereau, was on the north side of
the isthmus, at Bay Verte. De Ver-
gor, the French commandant, had
THE ACADIAN ISTHMUS, 1755.
no intimation of approaching danger
till the English fleet sailed fearlessly
into the bay and anchored before the
walls of Beau-Sejour. There was no
preparation for defence. On the 3d
of June the English forces landed,
and on the next day forced their way
across the ]Messa2;ouche. A vi2:orou3
siege of four days followed. Fear and confusion reigned among the gar-
rison ; no successful resistance could be offered. On the 16th of the month
Beau-Sejour capitulated, received an English garrison and took the name
of Fort Cumberland. The feeble post at Gaspereau was taken a few days
afterward, and named Fort Monckton. Captain Rous was despatched with
four vessels to capture the fort at the mouth of the St. John's ; but before
the fleet could reach its destination, the French reduced the town to ashes
and escaped into the interior. In a campaign of less than a month, and
with a loss of only twenty men, the English had made themselves mastei-s
of the whole country east of the St. Croix.
The war in Acadia was at an end ; but what should be done with
the people? The French* inhabitants still outnumbered the English
nearly three to one. Governor Lawrence and Admiral Boscawen, in con-
RUIN OF ACADIA.
263
ference with the chief justice of the province, settled upon the atrocious
measure of driving the people into banishment. The first movement was
to demand an oath of allegiance which \vas so framed that the French, as
honest Catholics, could not take it. The priests advised the peasants to
declare their loyalty^ but refuse the oath, which was meant to ensnare their
souls. The next step on the part of the English was to accuse the French
of treason, and to demand the surrender of all their firearms and boats.
To this measm-e the broken-hearted people also submitted. They even
offered to take the oath, but Lawrence declared that, having once refused,
they must now take the consequences. The British vessels were made
ready, and the work of forcil^le eniljarkation began.
The country about the isthmus was covered with peaceful hamlets.
THE EXILE OF THE ACADIANS.
*
These were now laid waste, and the people driven into the larger towns on
the coast. Others were induced by artifice and treachery to j)ut thejn-
selves into the power of the English. Wherever a sufficient number of
the French could be gotten together they were driven on shipboard.
They were allowed to take their wives and children and as much property
as would not be inconvenient on the vessels. The estates of the province
were confiscated, and what could not be ap])ropriated was given to the
* Longfellow's Evangeline is founded on this incident.
264 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
flames. The wails of thousands of bleeding hearts were wafted to heaven
with the smoke of burning homes. At the village of Grand Pre four
hundred and eighteen unarmed men were called together and shut up in
a church. Then came the wives and children, the old men and the
mothers, the sick and the infirm, to share the common fate. The whole
company numbered more than nineteen hundred souls. The poor crea-
tures were driven down to the shore, forced into the boats at the point
of the bayonet, and carried to the vessels in the bay. As the moaning
fugitives cast a last look at their pleasant town, a column of black smoke
floating seaward told the story of desolation. More than three thousand
of the hapless Acadians were carried away by the British squadron and
scattered, helpless, half starved and dying, among the English colonies.
The history of civilized nations furnishes no parallel to this wanton and
wicked destruction of an inoffensive colony.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
EXPEDITIONS OF SHIRLEY AND JOHNSON.
THE third campaign planned by Braddock at Alexandria was to be
conducted by Governor Shirley of Massachusetts. The expedition
was to proceed from Albany to Oswego, and thence by water to the
mouth of the Niagara. It was known that Fort Niagara was an insig-
nificant post, depending for its defence upon a small ditch, a rotten
palisade and a feeble garrison. To capture this place, to obtain command
of the river, and to cut off the communications of the French by way of
the lakes, were the objects of the campaign. " Fort du Quesne can hardly
detain me more than three or four days," said Braddock to Shirley, " and
then I will meet you at Niagara."
In the early part of August, Shirley set out at the head of nearly
two thousand men. It was the last of the month before he reached
Oswego. Here the provincial forces had been ordered to assemble. Four
weeks were spent in preparing boats for embarkation. When ever}'thing
was in readiness, a storm arose ; and when the storm abated, the wmds blew
in the wrong direction. Then came another tempest and another delay ;
then thickness prevailed in the camp. With the beginning of October
EXPEDITIONS OF SHIRLEY AND JOHNSON.
2G5
Shirley declared the lake to be dangerous for navigation. The Indians
deserted the standard of a leader whose skill in war consisted in framin^
excuses. The fact was that the general, while on the march to Oswego^
had learned of the destruction of Braddock's army, and feared that a sim-
ilar fate might overtake his own. On the 24th of October the greater
part of the provincial forces, led by Shirley, marched homeward. Only
one result of any importance folloM^ed from the campaign— the fort at
Oswego was well rebuilt and garrisoned with seven hundred men under
Mercer.
Far more important was the expedition entrusted to General Wil-
liam Johnson. The object had in view was to capture the enemy's fort-
ress at Crown Point, and to drive the French from the shores of Lake
Champlain. Johnson's army numbered three thousand four hundred
men, including a body of friendly Mohawks. The active work of the
campaign began early in August, when General Phineas Lyman, at the
head of the New England troops, proceeded to the Hudson above Albanv,
and at a point just below where the river bends ab- ^
ruptly to the west built Fort Edward. Thither in
the last days of summer came the commanding general
with the main division. The watershed between the
Hudson and Lake George is only twelve miles wide.
Johnson's army marched across to the head of the lake
and laid out a commodious camp. A Aveek was spent
in bringing forward the artillery and stores. The
soldiers were busy preparing boats for embarkation,
and the important matter of fortifying the camp was
wholly neglected.
In the mean time, Dieskau, the daring command-
ant at Crown Point, determined to anticipate the
movements of the English. With a force of fourteen
hundred French, Canadians and Indians he sailed up
Lake Champlain to South Bay. From this point he marched to the
upper springs of Wood Creek, intending to strike to the south, pass the
English army and capture Fort Edward before the alarm could be given.
But the news was carried to General Johnson ; and a force of a thousan<l
men under command of Colonel Williams, accompanied by Hendrick, the
gray-haired chieftain of the Mohawks, with two hundred warriors, was
sent to the relief of the endangered fort. On the previous night Dieskau's
guides had led him out of his course. On the morning of the 8th of
September the French general found himself and his army about four
miles nortli of Fort Edward, on the main road from the Hudson to Lake
VrCINITV OP LAKE
GEORGE, 1755.
266 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
George. Just at this time Colonel Williams's regiment and the Mohawks
came in sight, marching toward the fort. Dieskau quickly formed an
ambush, and the English were entrapped ; but the Indian allies of the
French showed themselves to their countrymen, and would not fire. The
Canadians and the French poured in a deadly volley ; both Williams and
Hendrick fell dead, and the English were thrown into confusion. But
Colonel Whiting rallied the troops, returned the enemy's fire, and re-
treated toward the lake. St. Pierre, one of the French generals, was
killed.
The noise of battle was heard in Johnson's camp, and preparations
were made for a general engagement. There were no entrenchments, Ijut
trees were hastily felled for breastworks, and the cannons. were brouglit
into position. It was Dieskau's plan to rush into the English camp
along with the fugitives whom he was driving before him ; but the In-
dians, afraid of Johnson's guns, would not join in the assault ; the Red
men retired to a hill at a safe distance. The Canadians were disheartened ;
and the handful of French regulars made the onset almost unsupported.
It was the fiercest battle which had yet been fought on American soil.
For five hours the conflict was incessant. In the beginning of the engage-
ment Johnson received a slight wound and left the field ; but the troops
.)f New England fought on without a commander. Nearly all of Dieskau's
regulars were killed. At last the English troops leaped over the fallen
trees, charged across the field, and completed the rout. Three times
Dieskau was wounded, but he would not retire. His aids came to bear
him off; one was shot dead, and he forbade the others. He ordered his
servants to bring him his military dress, and then seated himself on the
stump of a tree. A renegade Frenchman belonging to the English army
rushed up to make him a prisoner. The wounded general felt for his
watch to tender it in token of surrender. The Frenchman, thinking that
Dieskau was searching for a pistol, fired, and the brave commander fell,
mortally wounded.
The victory, though complete, was dearly purchased. Two hun-
dred and sixteen of the English were killed, and many others wounded.
General Johnson, who had done but little, was greatly praised ; Parliament
made him a baronet for gaining a victory which the provincials gained
tor him. INIade wiser by the battle, he now constructed on the site of iiis
camp a substantial fort, and named it William Henry. The defences of
Fort Edward were strengthened with an additional garrison, and the
remainder of the troops returned to their homes. Meanwhile, the French
had reinforced Crown Point, and had seized and fortified Ticonderoga.
Such was the condition of affairs at the close of 1755.
TWO YEARS OF DISASTER. 267
CHAPTER XXXIY.
TWO YEARS OF DISASTER.
AFTER the death of Braddock the chief command of the English
forces in America was given to Governor Shirley. But no regular
military organization had been effected ; and the war was carried on in a
desultory manner. Braddock had ruined one army ; Shirley had scat-
tered another. On Lake George, Johnson had achieved a marked suc-
cess. In the beginning of 1756, Washington at the head of the Vir-
ginian provincials repelled the French and Indians in the valley of the
Shenandoah. At the same time the Pennsylvania volunteers, choosing
Franklin for their colonel, marched to the banks of the Lehigh, built a
fort, and made a successful campaign. In the preceding December,
Shirley met the colonial governors at New York and planned the move-
ments for the following year. One expedition, proceeding by way of the
Kennebec, was to threaten Quebec. Forts Frontenac, Toronto and Niagara
were to be taken. Du Quesne, Detroit and Mackinaw, deprived of their
communications, must of course surrender.
In the mean time, after much debate in Parliament, it was decided
to consolidate and put under one authority all the military forces in
America. The earl of Loudoun received the appointment of commander-
in-chief. General Abercrombie was second in rank ; and forty British
and German officers were commissioned to organize and discipline the
colonial army. In the last of April, 1756, Abercrombie, with two bat-
talions of regulars, sailed for New York. Lord Loudoun was to follow
witli a fleet of transports, bearing the artillery, tents, ammunition and
equipage of the expedition. The commander waited a month for his
vessels, and then sailed without them. On the 15th of June a man-of-
war was despatched to America with a hundred thousand pounds to reim-
burse the colonies for the expenses of the previous campaigns. At the
same time the corps of British officers arrived at New York. Meanwhile,
on the 17th of May, Great Britain, after nearly two years of actual hos-
tilities, made an open declaration of war, which was followed by a similar
declaration on the part of France.
On the 25th of June, Abercrombie reached Albany. He began his
great campaign by surveying the town, digging a ditch and quartering
268 HISTORY OF THE UNITED SIATES.
his soldiers with the citizens. In July, Lord Loudoun arrived and
assumed the command of the colonial army. The French, meanwhile,
profiting by these delays, organized a force of more than five thousand
men, crossed Lake Ontario and laid siege to Oswego. The marquis of
Montcalm, who had succeeded Dieskau as commander-in-chief, led the
\ expedition. At the mouth of Oswego River there were two forts; the
old block-house on the west and the new Fort Ontario on the east. The
latter was first attacked. Thirty pieces of cannon were brought to bear
on the fortress. After a brave defence of one day, the little garrison
abandoned the works and escaped to the old fort across the river. This
place was also invested by the French. For two days the English, num-
bering only fourteen hundred, held out against the besiegers, and then sur-
rendered. A vast amount of ammunition, small arms, accoutrements
and provisions fell to the captors. Six vessels of war, three hundred
boats, a hundred and twenty cannon and three chests of money were the
further fruits of a victory by which France gained the only irtiportant
outpost of England on the lakes. To please his Indian allies, Montcalm
ordered Oswego to be razed to the ground.
During this summer the Delawares, false to their treaty, rose in
Western Pennsylvania and almost ruined the country. More than a
thousand people were killed or carried into captivity. In August, Colouel
John Armstrong, at the head of three hundred volunteers, crossed the
Alleghanies, and after a twenty days' march reached the Indian town of Kit-
taning, forty-five miles north-east from Pittsburg. Lying in concealment
until daydawn on the morning of September 8th, the English rose against
the savages, and after a desperate battle destroyed them almost to a man.
The village was burned and the spirit of the barbarians completely broken.
The Americans lost sixteen men. Colonel Armstrong and Captain Hugh
Mercer, afterward distinguished in the Revolution, were both severely
wounde<l.
Lord Loudoun continued at Albany. His forces were amply suffi-
cient to capture every stronghold of Canada in the space of six weeks.
Instead of marching boldly to the north, he whiled away the summer and
fall, talked about an attack from the French, digged ditches, slandered
the provincial officers and waited for winter. When the frosts came, he
made haste to distribute the colonial troops and to quarter the regulars on
the principal towns. The vigilant French, learning what sort of a general
they had to cope with, crowded Lake Champlain with boats, strengthened
Crown Point and completed a fort at Ticonderoga. With the exception
of Armstrong's expedition against the Indians, the year 1756 closed with-
out a single substantial success on the part of the English.
TWO YEARS OF DISASTER. 269
And the year 1757 was equally disastrous. The campaign which
was planned by Loudoun \vas limited to tlie conquest of Louisburg. Evei
since the treaty of Uti-echt the French had retained Cape Breton ; and
the fortress at Louisburg had been made one of the strongest on the con-
tinent. On the 20th of June, Lord Loudoun sailed from New York with
an army of six thousand regulars. By the first of July he was at Hal-
ifax, where he was joined by Admiral Holbourn with a powerful fleet of
sixteen men-of-war. There were on board five thousand additional
troops fresh from the armies of England. Never was such a use made of
a splendid armament. Loudoun landed before Halifax, cleared oif a mus-
tering plain, and set his officers to drilling regiments already skilled in
every manoeuvre of war. To heigliten the absurdity, the fields about the
city were planted with onions. For it was said that the men might take
the scurv}^ ! By and by the news came that the French vessels in the
harbor of Louisburg outnumbered by one the ships of the English squad-
ron. To attack a force that seemed superior to his own was not a part of
Loudoun's tactics. Ordering the fleet to go cruising around Cape Breton,
he immediately embarked with his army, and sailed for New York.
Arriving at this place, he proposed to his officers to fortify Long Island
in order to defend the continent against an enemy whom he outnumbered
four to one.
Meanwhile, the daring Montcalm had made a brilliant campaign in
the country of Lake George. With a force of six thousand French and
Canadians and seventeen hundred Indians he proceeded up the Sorel,
entered Lake Champlain, and reached Ticonderoga. The object of the
expedition was to capture and destroy Fort William Henry. The French
and the Iroquois, who had now abandoned the cause of the colonies, were
fired with enthusiasm. Dragging their artillery and boats across the
portage to Lake George, they re-embarked, and on the 3d of August laid
siege to the English fort. The place was defended by only five hundred
men under the brave Colonel Monro ; but there were seventeen hundred
additional troops within supporting distance in the adjacent trenches. AH
this while General Webb was at Fort Edward, but fourteen miles distant,
with an army of more than four thousand British regulars. Instead of
advancing to the relief of Fort William Henry, Webb held a council tc
determine if it were not better to retire to Albany, and sent a message tc
Colonel Monro advising capitulation.
For six days the French pressed the siege with vigor. The ammu-
nition of the garrison Avas nearly exhausted ; half of the guns were burst;
nothing remained but to surrender. Honorable terms were granted. The
English, retaining their private effects, were released on a pledge not to
270 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
re-enter the service for eighteen months. A safe escort was promised to
Fort Edward. On the 9th of August the French took possession of the
fortress. Unfortunately, the Indians procured a quantity of spirits from
the English camp. Maddened with intoxication, and in spite of the
utmost exertions of Montcalm and his officers, the savages fell upon the
])risoners and began a massacre. Thirty of the English were tomahawked
and many others dragged away into captivity. The retirement of the
garrison to Fort Edward became a panic and a rout.
Such had been the successes of France during the year that the
English had not a single hamlet or fortress remaining in the whole basin
of the St. Lawrence. Every cabin where English was spoken had been
swept out of the Ohio valley. At the close of tho year 1757, France pos-
sessed twenty times as much American territory as England ; and five
times as much as England and Spain together. Such had been the im-
becility of the Englisli management in America that the flag of Great
Britain was brought into disgrace.
CHAPTER XXXV.
TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSES.
r^ RE AT was the discouragement in England. The duke of Newcastle
^ and his associates in the government were obliged to resign. A new
ministry was formed, at the head of which was placed that remarkable
man William Pitt, called the Great Commoner. The imbecile Lord
Loudoun was deposed from the American army. General Abercrombie
was appointed to succeed him; but the main reliance for success was
placed, not so much on the commander-in-chief, as on an efficient corps
of subordinate officers whom the wisdom of Pitt now directed to Amerira.
Admiral Boscawen Avas put in command of the fleet, consisting of twenty-
two ships of the line and fifteen frigates. The able general Amhei-st "^^ as
to lead a division. Young Lord Howe, brave and amiable, was next in
rank to Abercrombie. The gallant James Wolfe led a brigade. General
Forbes held an important command ; and Colonel Richard Montgomery
was at the head of a regiment.
Three campaigns were planned for 1758. Amherst, acting in con-
TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSES. 271
junction with the fleet, was to capture Louisburg. Lord Howe, under
the direction of the commander-in-chief, was to reduce Crown Point
and Ticonderoga. The recovery of the Ohio valley was entrusted to
General Forbes. On the 28th of May, Amherst, at the head of ten
thousand effective men, reached Halifax. In six days more the fleet was
anchored in Gabarus Bay. Wolfe put his division into boats, rowed
ithrough the surf under fire of the French batteries, and gained the shore
without serious loss. The French dismantled their battery and retreated.
Wolfe next gained possession of the north-east harbor and planted heavy
guns on the cape near the lighthouse. From this position the island
battery of the French was soon silenced. Louisburg was fairly invested,
and the siege was pressed with great vigor. On the 21st of July three
French vessels were burned in the harbor. Two days later, the Prudent,
a seventy-four gun ship, was fired and destroyed by the English boats.
The town was already a heap of ruins, and the walls of the fortress began
to crumble. For a whole week the French soldiers had no place where
they could rest in safety ; of their fifty-two cannon only twelve remained-
in position. Further resistance was hopeless. On the 28th of July
Louisburg capitulated. Cape Breton and Prince Edward's Island were sur-
rendered to Great Britain. The garrison, together with the marines, in
all nearly six thousand men, became prisoners of war and were sent to
England. Amherst after his great success abandoned Louisburg, and the
fleet took station at Halifax.
Meanwhile, General Abercrombie had not been idle. On the 5th of
July an army of fifteen thousand men, led by Lord Howe, reached Lake
George and embarked for Ticonderoga. With heavy guns and abundant
stores the expedition proceeded to the northern extremity of the lake and
landed on the western shore. The country about the French fortress was
very unfavorable for military operations. The English proceeded with
great difficulty, leaving their artillery behind. Lord Howe led the ad-
vance in person. On the morning of the 6th, when the English were
Hearing the fort, they fell in with the picket line of the French, number-
ing no more than three hundred. A s6vere skirmish ensued ; the French
were overwhelmed, but not until they had inflicted on the English a
terrible loss in the death of Lord Howe. The soldiers were stricken with
grief, and began a retreat to the landing. Abercrombie was in the rear,
but the soul of the expedition had departed.
On the morning of the 8th the English engineer reported falsely
that the fortifications of Ticonderoga were flimsy and trifling. Again the
army was put in motion ; and when just beyond the reach of the French
guns, the divisions were arranged to carry the place by assault. For more
272 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
than four hours column after column dashed with great bravery against
the breastworks of the enemy, which were found to be strong and w^ell
constructed. The defence was made by nearly four thousand French
under Montcalm, who, with coat off in the hot July afternoon, was every-
where present encouraging his men. At six o'clock in the evening the
English were finally repulsed. The carnage was dreadful, the loss on the
side of the assailants amounting in killed and wounded to nineteen hun-
dred and sixteen. In no battle of the Revolution did the British have so
large a force engaged or meet so terrible a loss.
The English still outnumbered the French three to one ; and they
might have easily returned with their artillery and captured the fort. But
Abercrombie was not the man to do it. He returned to Fort George, at
the head of the lake, and contented himself with sending a force of three
thousand men under Colonel Bradstreet against Fort Frontenac. This
fortress was situated on the present site of Kingston, at the outlet of Lake
Ontario. Marching through the country of the Indians who were still
friendly to the English, Bradstreet reached Oswego, embarked his forces,
crossed the lake and landed within a mile of Frontenac. The place was
feebly defended, and a siege of two days compelled a capitulation. The
fortress, so important to the French, was demolished. Forty-six cannon,
nine vessels of war and a vast quantity of stores were the fruits of the
victory. Except in the waste of life, Bradstreet's success more than coun-
terbalanced the failure of the English at Ticonderoga. The French were
everywhere w'eakened and despairing. In Canada the crops had failed,
and there "was almost a famine. " Peace, peace, no matter with what
boundaries," was the message which the brave Montcalm sent to the
French ministry.
Late in the summer, Forbes, at the head of nine thousand men, ad-
vanced from Philadelphia against Fort du Quesne. Washington led the
Virginia provincials, and Armstrong, who had so distinguished himself
at Kittaning, the Pennsylvanians. The main body moved slowly, clear-
ing a broad road and bridging the streams. Washington and the pro-
vincials were im]iatient. Major Grant, more rash than wise, pressed on
to within a few miles of Du Quesne. Attempting to lead the French
and Indians into an ambuscade, he was himself ambuscaded, and lost a
third of his forces. Slowly the main division approached the fort, which
was defended by no more than five hundred men. On the 24th of No-
vember, Washington wath the advance was within ten miles of Du
Quesne. During that night the garrison took the alarm, burned the fort-
ress and floated doAvn the Ohio. On the 25th the victorious army
marched over the ruined bastions, raised the English flag, and named
TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSES. 273
the place Pittsburg. The name of the great British minister M^as justly
■WTitten over " the gateway of the West."
General Amherst was now promoted to the chief command of the
American forces. Parliament cheerfully voted twelve million pounds
sterling to carry on the war. The colonies exerted themselves to the
utmost. By the beginning of summer, 1759, the British and colonial
forces numbered nearly fifty thousand men. The whole population of
Canada was only eighty-two thousand ; and the entire French army
scarcely exceeded seven thousand. Nothing less than the conquest of all
Canada would satisfy Pitt's ambition. Three campaigns were planned
for the year. General Prideaux was to conduct an expedition against
Niagara, capture the fortress and descend the lake to Montreal. Amherst
was to lead the main division against Ticonderoga and Crown Point.
General Wolfe was to proceed up the St. Lawrence and finish the work
by capturing Quebec.
By way of Schenectady and Oswego, Prideaux led his forces to
Niagara. On the 10 th of July the place was invested. The French
general D'Aubry collected from Detroit, Erie, Le Boeuf and Venango a
body of twelve hundred men, and marched to the relief of the fort. On
the 15th, by the accidental bursting of a mortar. General Prideaux was
killed. Sir William Johnson, succeeding to the command, disposed his
forces so as to intercept the approaching French. On the morning of the
24th, D'Aubry's army came in sight. A bloody engagement ensued, in
which the French were completely routed, leaving their unnumbered
dead scattered for miles through the forest. On the next day Niagara
capitulated and received an English garrison. The French forces in the
town, to the number of six hundred, became prisoners of war. Commun-
ication between Canada and Louisiana was for ever broken.
At the same time Amherst was conquering on Lake Champlain.
With an army of more than eleven thousand men he proceeded against
Ticonderoga. On the 22d of July the English forces were disembarked
near the landing-place of Abercrombie. The French did not dare to
stand against them. There was a slight skirmish, and then the trenches
were deserted. Fort Carillon was given up. On the 26th the French
garrison, having partly destroyed the fortifications, abandoned Ticon-
deroga and retreated to Cro^vn Point. Five days afterward they de-
serted this place also, and entrenched themselves on Isle-aux-Noix, in the
river Sorel. The whole country of Lake Champlain had been recovered
without a battle.
It remained for General Wolfe to achieve the final victor}% As
soon as a tarJy spring had cleared the St. Lawrence of ice, he began the
18
274
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
VICINITY OF QtTEBEC, 1759.
ascent of the river. His force consisted of nearly eight thousand men,
assisted by a fleet of forty-four vessels under command of Admiral Saun-
ders. On the 27th of June the armament arrived without accident at
the Isle of Orleans, four miles below Quebec. The English camp was
pitched at the upper end of the
island. Wolfe's vessels gave him
immediate command of the river,
and the southern bank was unde-
fended. On the night of the 29th,
General Monckton was sent wath four
battalions to seize Point Levi. The
movement was successful, and aa
English battery was planted opposite
the city. From this position the
Lower Town was soon reduced to
ruins, and the Upper Town much
injured ; but the fortress seemed im-
pregnable. The French, knowing
that it would be impossible to storm
the city from the river side, had drawn their line of entrenchment from the
northern bank of the St. Lawrence, reaching for five miles from the
Montmorenci to the St. Charles. Here Montcalm with ten or twelve
thousand French and Canadians awaited the movements of his antagonist.
Wolfe was restless and anxious for battle. On the 9th of July he
crossed the north channel, and encamped with his army on the east bank
of the Montmorenci. It was determined in a council of war to hazard
an engagement. The Montmorenci was fordable when the tide ran out.
The attack was planned for July 31st, at the hour of low water. Generals
Townshend and ISIurray were ordered to ford the stream with their two
brigades, and at the same time Monckton's regiments of regulars were to
cross the St. Lawrence from Point Levi and aid in the assault. The
signal was given, and the grenadiers of Murray and Townshend dashed
across the Montmorenci ; but the boats of Monckton ran aground, and there
was considerable delay. The impatient grenadiers, without waiting for
orders or support, rushed forward against the French entrenchments, and
were driven back with great loss. Before the regulars could be formed
in line the battle was decided. Night was approaching ; the tide rising ;
a storm portended ; and Wolfe, after losing nearly five hundred men, with-
drew to his camp.
Disappointment, exposure and fatigue threw the English general
into a violent fever, and for many days he was confined to his tent. A
TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSES.
275
council of officers was called, and the indomitable leader proposed a second
assault on the French lines. But the proposition was overruled, and it
was decided to ascend
the St. Lawrence, and
if possible gain pos-
session of the Plains
of Abraham, in the
rear of the city. The
camp on the Mont-
morenci was accord-
ingly broken up, and
on the 6th of Septem-
ber the troops and ar-
tillery were conveyed
to Point Levi. Keep-
ing the French excited
with appearances of
activity, Wolfe again
transferred his army to
a point several miles
up the river. He then
busied himself with a
careful examination of
the northern bank, in
the hope of finding
some path among the precipitous cliffs by Avhich to gain the plains. On
the 11th he discovered the place called Wolfe's Cove, and decided that
here it was possible to make the ascent. Montcalm, deceived by the
movements of the fleet, was still in the trenches below the city.
On the night of the 12th of September everything was in readi-
ness. The English silently entered their transports and dropped down
the river to the cove. With great difficulty the soldiers clambered up
the almost perpendicular precipice; the feeble Canadian guard on the
summit was dispersed ; and in the gray dawn of morning Wolfe mar-
shaled his army for battle. Montcalm was in amazement when he heard
the news. " They are now on the weak side of this unfortunate town,"
said he ; " and we must crush them before mid-day." With great haste
the French were brought from the trenches and thrown between Quebeo
and the advancing English. The battle began with an hour's cannonade ;
then Montcalm attempted to turn the English flank, but was beaten back.
The Canadians and Indians were routed. Then came the weakened bat-
GENERAL JAMES WOLFE.
276 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
talions of the French ; but they were poorly disciplined ; the ground was
uneven, and Montcalm's lines advanced brokenly. The English reserved
their fire until the advancing columns were within forty yards, and then
discharged volley after volley. The French wavered and were in con-
fusion. Wolfe, leading the charge, was wounded in the wrist. Again
he was struck, but pressed on at the head of his grenadiers. Just at the
moment of victory a third ball pierced his breast, and he sank quivering
to the earth. " They run, they run !" said the attendant who bent over
him. " Who run ?" was the feeble response. " The French are flying
everywhere," replied the officer. " Do they run already ? Then I die
happy," said the expiring hero; and his spirit passed away amid the
smoke of battle. Monckton was dangerously wounded and borne from the
field. Montcalm, still attempting to rally his broken regiments, was
struck with a ball, and fell. " Shall I survive ?" said he to his surgeon.
" But a few hours at most," replied the attendant. " So much the better,"
replied the heroic Frenchman. " I shall not live to witness the surrender
of Quebec."
Further defence of the Canadian stronghold was useless. Five
days after the battle the French authorities surrendered to General Town-
shend, and an English garrison took possession of the citadel. The year
1759 closed with the complete triumph of the English arms. In the
following spring France made a great eifort to recover her losses. A severe
battle was fought a few miles west of Quebec, and the English were
driven into the city. But reinforcements came, and the French were
beaten back. On the 8th of September, in the same year, Montreal, the
last important post of France in the valley of the St. Lawrence, surren-
dered to General Amherst. Canada had passed under the dominion of
England.
In the spring of 1760 the Cherokees of Tennessee rose against the
English. Fort Loudoun, in the north-eastern extremity of the State, was
besieged by the Red men, and forced to capitulate. Honorable terms were
promised to the garrison ; but as soon as the surrender was made, the
savages fell upon their prisoners and massacred or dragged into captivity
the ^^•hole company. Colonels Montgomery and Grant were despatched
by General Amherst to chastise the Indians. After a vigorous campaign
the savages were driven into the mountains and compelled to sue for
peace.
The conquest of Canada was the overthrow of the French power
in America. It remained, however, for the English authorities to
take actual possession of the immense territory bordering on the Great
Lakes. At the time of the capture of IMontreal this vast domain was
TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSES. 277
held by feeble fortresses, scattered here and there, and garrisoned \>j
detachments of French soldiers. The Marquis of Vaudreuil in sur-
rendering Montreal had stipulated that all the western forts under the
control of France should be given up to England. In the fall of 1760
Major Robert Rogers was accordingly despatched by General Amherst,
with a company of two hundred provincial rangers, to receive the sur-
render of the outposts.
By the last of November, Rogers, having ascended the St. Law-
rence and passed through Lakes Ontario and Erie, reached Detroit.
Over this, the most important of the French posts in the West, the
English flag was raised ; Forts Miami on the southern shore of Lake
Michigan and Ouatanon on the Wabash were also given up without
resistance. Rogers then pressed on to take possession of Mackinaw,
Green Bay and St. Marie, but was turned back by the storms on Lake
Huron ; and it was not until the following summer that those remote
fortresses were garrisoned by detachments of British soldiers.
No sooner were the English in complete possession of the coun-
try than they began by neglect and ill-treatment to excite, the dor-
mant passions of the Red men. During the progress of the war the
Indians had become completely subordinated by French influence ;
and the English were hated with all the ferocity of the savage na-
ture. It was not long till there were mutterings of an outbreak.
The tribes could not be made to comprehend that Canada had been
finally taken from their friends, the French. They confidently ex-
pected the day when the king of France should send new armies and
expel the detested English. Infatuated with this belief, instigated
by the French themselves, and stung by many insults real and im-
aginary, the warriors began their usual atrocities on the frontiers.
In the summer of 1761, the Senecas conspired with the Wyandots to
capture Detroit by treachery, and massacre the garrison ; and the plot
was barely thwarted by Colonel Campbell, the commandant. In the
following summer another attempt of a similar sort was discovered
and defeated. It was in this condition of affairs that the celebrated
Pontiac came forward and organized the most far-reaching and dan-
gerous conspiracy ever known among the Indian tribes of America.
Pontiac was chief of the Ottawas, whose principal seat was the
district between Lakes Erie and Michigan. In the somewhat pro-
longed interval between the conquest of Canada and the treaty of
1763, this sagacious warrior, doubting the possibility of a peace be-
tween the rival nations, conceived the design of uniting all the Indian
tribes from the Alleghanies to the Mississippi in an overwhelming
278
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
confederacy, which should upon a given day strike all the English
forts upon the frontier a deadly blow, and sweep away in a common
ruin every English family west of the mountains. The plot was con-
structed with the White man's skill and the Red man's cunnins;. The
7th of May, 1763, was named as the day of destruction. But when
the time came the impatient savage tribes were unable to act in per-
fect concert, and ultimate failure was the consequence, though the
immediate result was terribly disastrous.
Pontiac reserved for himself the most difficult task of all — the
capture of Detroit. But in the hour of impending doom, Avoman's
love interposed to save the garrison from butchery. An Indian girl
of the Ojibwa nation, came to the fort with a pair of moccasins for
Major Gladwyn, the commandant, and in parting with him manifested
unusual agitation and distress. She was seen to linger at the street
corner, and the sentinel summoned her to return to the major's quar-
ters. There, after much persuasion and many assurances of protec-
tion, she yielded to his urgent inquiries into the cause of her grief
and revealed the plot. When Pontiac's band on the following day
attempted to gain the fort by treachery, they found every soldier and
citizen under arms and ready to receive them. Then followed a
protracted siege, and the savage horde was finally driven off. But
TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSES. 279
in all other quarters the attacks were attended with the most fatal
results. On the 16th of May Fort Sandusky was taken and burned,
and the garrison butchered by a baud of Wyandots. A few days
later Fort St. Joseph suffered a similar fate at the hands of the Pot-
tawattamieg. On the 29th of the month Fort Mackinaw was taken
and its defenders nearly all murdered by the Chippeways. One out-
post after another was captured and burned, until by the middle of
summer every English fort in the West, except Niagara, Fort Pitt
and Detroit, had fallen into the hands of the savages. But in the
mean time rumors of a treaty between France and England were
borne to the Red men; and they, becoming alarmed at their own
atrocities, began to sue for peace. The confederacy crumbled into
nothing. Every tribe seemed as anxious to avoid the consequences
as it had been to take up the hatchet. Pontiac and his band of Ot-
tawas held out for two years longer; then, abandoned by his follow-
ers, he fled to the Illinois, among whom he was finally killed in a
drunken brawl at the Indian town of Cahokia, opposite St. Louis.
For three years after the fall of Montreal the war between
France and England lingered on the ocean. The English fleets were
everywhere victorious. On the 10th of February, 1763, a treaty of
peace was made at Paris. All the French possessions in North Amer-
ica eastward of the Mississippi from its source to the river Iberville,
and thence through Lakes Maurepas and Pontchartrain to the Gulf
of Mexico, were surrendered to Great Britain. At the same time
Spain, with whom England had been at war, ceded East and AVest
Florida to the English Crown. As reciprocal with this provision
France was obliged to make a cession to Spain of all that vast terri-
tory west of the Mississippi, known as the Province of Louisiana.
By the sweeping provisions of this treaty the French king lost his
entire possessions in the New World. Thus closed the French and
Indian War, one of the most important in the history of mankind.
By this conflict it was decided that the decaying institutions of the
Middle Ages should not prevail in the West; and that the powerful
language, laws and liberties of the English race should be planted
for ever in the vast domains of the New World.
280 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XXXyi.
CONDITION OF THE COLONIES.
"DEFORE entering upon the stirring events of the Revolution, it
-A-' will be of interest to glance at the general, condition of the
American Colonies. There were thirteen of them: four in New
England, — Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hamp-
shire; four Middle Colonies, — New York, New Jersey, Pennsylva-
nia, Delaware ; five Southern, — Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Georgia. All had grown and prospered. The ele-
ments of power were everywhere present. A willful, patriotic, and
vigorous race of democrats had taken possession of the New World.
Institutions unknown in Europe, peculiar to the West, made neces-
sary by the condition and surroundings of the colonies, had sprung
up and were taking deep root in American soil.
According to estimates made for the year 1760 the population
of the colonies amounted to a million six hundred and ninety-five
thousand souls. Of these about three hundred and ten thousand were
blacks. Massachusetts was at this period perhaps the strongest col-
ony, having more than two hundred thousand people of European
ancestry within her borders. True, Virginia was the most populous,
having an aggregate of two hundred and eighty-four thousand inhab-
itants, but of these one hundred and sixteen thousand were Africans,
slaves. Next in strength stood Pennsylvania with a population of
nearly two hundred thousand; next Connecticut with her hundred
and thirty thousand people ; next Maryland with a hundred and four
thousand ; then New York with eighty-five thousand ; New Jersey not
quite as many; then South Carolina, and so through the feebler col-
onies to Georgia, in whose borders were less than five thousand in-
habitants, including the negroes.
By the middle of the eighteenth century the people of the Amer-
ican colonies had to a certain extent assumed a national character; but
they were still strongly marked with the peculiarities which their an-
cestors had brought from Europe. In New England, especially in Mas-
sachusetts and Connecticut, the principles and practices of Puritanism
still held universal sway. On the banks of the Hudson the language,
manners, and customs of Holland were almost as prevalent as they
CONDITION OF THE COLONIES.
281
had been a hundred years before. By the Delaware the Quakers
were gathered in such numbers as to control all legislation, and to
prevent serious innovations upon the simple methods of civil and
social organization introduced by Penn. On the northern bank of
the Potomac, the youth-
ful Frederick, the sixth
Lord Baltimore, a friv-
olous and dissolute gov-
ernor, ruled a people
who still conformed to
the order of things es-
tablished a hundred and
thirty years previously
by Sirs George and Ce-
cil Calvert. In Vir-
ginia, mother of States
and statesmen, the peo-
ple had all their old
peculiarities ; a some-
what haughty demean-
or; pride of ancestry;
fondness for aristocratic
sports; hospitality; love
of freedom. The North
Carolinians were at this
epoch the same rugged
and insubordinate race
of hunters that they had
always been. The leg-
islative assembly, in its
controversies with Gov-
ernor Dobbs, manifested all the intractable stubbornness which char-
acterized that body in the days of Seth Sothel. In South Carolina
there was much prosperity and happiness. But there, too, popular
liberty had been enlarged by the constant encroachment of the leg-
islature upon the royal prerogative. The people, mostly of French
descent, were as hot-blooded and jealous of their rights as their an-
cestors had been in the times of the first immigrations. Of all the
American colonies Georgia had at this time least strength and spirit.
Under the system of government established at the first the common-
wealth had languished. Not until 1754, when Governor Eeynolds
THE OLD THIRTEEN COLONIES.
N
282 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
assumed control of the colony, did the affairs of the people on the
Savannah begin to flourish. Even afterwards, something of the
indio-ence and want of thrift which had marked the followers of
o
Oglethorpe still prevailed in Georgia. Nevertheless, after making
allowance for all these differences of colonial character, a consid-
erable degree of American unity had been attained ; inter-colonial
relations were well established; and the people were far less antag-
onistic and sectional than they had been.
In matters of education New England took the lead. Her
system of free schools extended everywhere from the Hudson to the
Penobscot. Every village furnished facilities for the acquirement of
knowledge. So complete and universal were the means of instruc-
tion that in the times preceding the Revolution there loas not to be
found in all Neio England an adult, horn in the country, ivho could
not read and lorite. Splendid achievement of Puritanism ! In the
Middle Colonies education was not so general ; but in Pennsylvania
there was much intelligent activity among the people. Especially in
Philadelphia did the illustrious Franklin scatter the light of learn-
ing. South of the Potomac educational facilities were irregular and
generally designed for the benefit of the wealthier classes. But in
some localities the means of enlightenment were well provided; in-
stitutions of learning sprang up scarcely inferior to those of the East-
ern provinces, or even of Europe. Nor should the private schools of
the colonial times be forgotten. Many men — Scottish reformers, Irish
liberals, and French patriots — despising the bigotry and intolerance
of their countrymen, fled for refuge to the New World, and there by
the banks of the Housatonic, the Hudson, the Delaware, the Poto-
mac, the Ashley, and the Savannah, taught the lore of books and
the lesson of liberty to the rugged boys of the American wiklerness.
Among the Southern colonies Virginia led the van in mattei-s of edu-
cation; while Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia lagged behind.
Previous to the Revolution nine colleges worthy of the name had
been established in the colonies. These were Harvard, William and
Mary, Yale, Princeton, King's (now called Columbia), Brown, Queen's
(afterwards called Rutgers), Dartmouth, and Hampden and Sydney.
In 1764 the first medical college was founded, at Philadelphia.
Of the printing-press, that other great agent and forerunner of
civilization, the work was already effective. As early as 1704 the
Boston Neivs- Letter, first of periodicals in the New World, was pub-
lished in the city of the Puritans; but fifteen years elapsed before
another experiment of the same sort was made. In 1721 the New
England Courant, a little sheet devoted to free thought and the ex-
CONDITION OF THE COLONIES. 283
tinction of rascality, was established at Boston by the two Franklins
— James and Benjamin. In 1740 New York had but one period-
ical, Virginia one, and South Carolina one ; and at the close of the
French and Indian War, there were no more than ten newspapers
published in the colonies. The chief obstacles to such publications
were the absence of great cities and the difficulty of communication
between distant sections of the country. Boston and Philadelphia
had each no more than eighteen thousand inhabitants; New York
but twelve thousand. In all Virginia there was not one Important
town; while as far south as Georgia there was scarcely a considerable
Tillage. To reach this widely scattered population with periodical
j)ublications was quite impossible. Books were few, and of little
value. Some dry volumes of history, theology, and politics were the
only stock and store. On the latter subject the publications were
sometimes full of pith and spirit. But notwithstiinding this barren-
ness of books and general poverty of the resources of knowledge, it
was no unusual thing to find at the foot of the Virginia mountains,
in the quiet precincts of Philadelphia, by the banks of the Hudson,
or in the valleys of New England, a man of great and solid learn-
ing. Such a man was Thomas Jefferson ; such were Franklin, and
Livingston, and the Adamses — men of profound scholarship, bold in
thought, ready with the j^en, skillful in argument; studious, witty,
and eloquent.
Nothing impeded the progress of the colonies more than the
want of thoroughfares and easy communication between the different
sections. No general system of post-offices or post-roads had as yet
been established; and the people were left in comparative or total
ignorance of passing events. No common sentiments could be ex-
pressed— no common enthusiasm be kindled in the country — by the
slow-going mails and packets. The sea-coast towns and cities found
a readier intercourse by means of small sloops plying the Atlantic ;
but the inland districts were Avholly cut off from such advantages.
Roads were slowly built from point to point, and lines of travel by
coach and wagon were gradually established. To the very beginning
of the Revolution the people lived apart, isolated and dependent upon
their own resources for life and enjoyment. When in 1766 an ex-
press wagon made the trip from New York to Philadelphia in two
days, it was considered a marvel of rapidity. Six years later the first
stage-coach began to run regularly between Boston and Providence.*
* It is remarkable to note how tardily the attention of a people will be turned to the
tuilding of roads. 3?hus, for instance, in so old a country as Scotland there were no
great thoroughfares constructed until after the Scotch Rebellion of 1745.
284 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Before the Revolution the Americans were for the most part
an agricultural J)eopie. Within the tide-water line of Virginia the
lands were divided into estates, and the planters devoted themselves
almost exclusively to the cultivation of tobacco. Farther inland the
products were more various: wheat, maize, potatoes; upland cotton,
hemp, and flax. In the Carolinas and Georgia the rice crop was
most important; after that, indigo, cotton, and some silk; tar, tur-
pentine, and what the hunter and fisherman gathered from the woods
and streams. New York, Philadelphia and Boston were then as now
the great centers of trade ; but commerce was carried on in a slow
and awkward manner, wholly unlike the rushing activity of more
recent times. Ship-building was one of the most important colonial
interests. In the year 1738 no less than forty-one sailing vessels,
with an average burden of a hundred and fifty tons, were built and
launched at the ship-yards of Boston. New England was the seat of
Avhatever manufacturing interest prevailed in the country. But all
enterprise in this direction was checked and impeded by the British
Board of Trade, whose stupid and arbitrary restrictions acted as a
damper on every kind of colonial thrift. No sooner would some
enterprising company of New England men begin the building of a
factory than this officious Board would interfere in such a way as to
inake success impossible. So jealous was the English ministry of
American progress! If, previous to the Revolution, any colonial
manufacture was successfully established, it was done against the will
of Great Britain, and in spite of her mean and churlish opposition.
Such were the American colonies — such the people whose bud-
ding nationality was now to be exposed to the blasts of war. These
people, whose ancestors had been driven into exile by the exactions
of European governments and the bigotry of ecclesiastical power, had
become the rightful proprietors of the New World. They had fairly
won it from savage man and savage nature. They had subdued it
and built States within it. They owned it by all the claims of actual
possession ; by toil and trial ; by the ordeal of suffering ; by peril,
privation, and hardship ; by the baptism of sorrow and the shedding
of blood. No wonder that patriotism was the child of such travail
and discipline ! No wonder that the men who from mountain and
sky and river, from orchard and valley and forest, from the memo-
ries of the past, the aspirations of the present and the hopes of the
future, had drank in the spirit of Liberty until their souls were per-
vaded with her sublime essence, — were now ready when the iron heel
of oppression was set upon their cherished rights, to draw the vindic-
tive sword f'von ncainst the venerable monarchv of En2:landl
PART IV.
REYOLUTIO^ AND OOlNrFEDERATIOK
A. D. 1775—1789.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
CA USES.
THE war of American Independence was an event of vast moment,
affecting the destinies of all nations. The question decided by the
conflict was this : Whether the English colonies in America, becoming
sovereign, should govern themselves or be ruled as dependencies of a
European monarchy. The decision was rendered in favor of separation
and mdependence. The result has been the grandest and most promising
example of republican government in the history of the world. The
struggle was long and distressing, though not characterized by great
violence ; the combatants were of the same race and spoke a common lan-
guage. It is of the first importance to understand the causes of the war.
The most general cause of the American Revolution was the eight
OF AEBITRAEY GOVERNMENT, claimed by Great Britain and denied by
the colonies. So long as this claim was asserted by England only as a
theory, the conflict was postponed ; when the English government began
to enforce the principle in practice, the colonies resisted. The question
began to be openly discussed about the time of the treaty of Aix-la-
Chapelle, in 1748 ; and from that period until the beginning of hostilities,
in 1775, each year witnessed a renewal of the agitation. But there were
also many subordinate causes tending to bring on a conflict.
First of these was the influence of France, which was constantly
exerted so as to incite a spirit of resistance in the colonies. The French
king would never have agreed to the treaty of 1763 — by which Canada
was ceded to Great Britain — had it not been with the hope of securing
American independence. It was the theory of France that by giving up
Canada on the north the English colonies would become so strong as to
renounce their allegiance to the crown. England feared such a result.
More than once it was proposed in Parliament to re-cede Canada to France
(285)
286 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
in order to check the gro\^'th of the American States. " There, now !"
said a French statesman when the treaty of 1763 was signed; "we have
arranged matters for an American rebellion in which England will lose
her empire in the West."
Another cause leading to the Revolution was found in the natural
disposition and inherited character of the colonists. They were, for the
most part, republicans in politics and dissenters in religion. The people
of England were monarchists and High Churchmen. The colonists had
never seen a king. The Atlantic lay between them and the British min-
istry. Their dealings with the royal officers had been such as to engender
a dislike for monarchical institutions. The people of America had not
forgotten — could not well forget — the circumstances under which their
ancestors had come to the New World. For six generations the colonists
had managed their own affairs ; and their methods of government were
necessarily republican. The experiences of the French and Indian War
had shown that Americans were fully able to defend themselves and their
country.
The growth of public opinion in the colonies tended to independence.
The more advanced thinkers came to believe that a complete separation
from England was not only possible, but desirable. As early as 1755, John
Adams, then a young school-teacher in Connecticut, wrote in his diary :
" In another century all Europe will not be able to subdue us. The only
way to keep us from setting up for ourselves is to disunite us." Such
opinions were at first expressed only in private, then by hints in pam-
phlets and newspapers, and at last publicly and everywhere. The mass
of the people, however, were slow to accept an idea which seemed so rad-
ical and dangerous. Not until the war had actually begun did the ma-
jority declare for independence.
Another cause of the conflict with the mother country was found in
the personal character of the king. George III., M-ho ascended the Eng-
lish throne in 1760, was one of the worst monarchs of modern times.
His notions of government were altogether despotic. He was a stubborn,
stupid, thick-headed man in whose mind the notion of human rights \va3
entirely wanting. It was impossible for him to conceive of a magnan-
imous project or to appreciate the value of civil liberty. His reign of
sixty years was as odious as it was long. In the management of the
British empire he employed only those who were the narrow-minded
partisans of his own policy. His ministers were, for the most part, men
as incompetent and illiberal as himself. With such a king and sucn a
ministry it was not likely that the descendants of the Pilgrims would get
on smoothly.
CAUSES. 287
The more immediate cause of the Revolution was the passage by-
Parliament of a number of acts destructive of colonial liberty. These acts
were resisted by the colonies, and the attempt was made by Great Britain
to enforce them with the bayonet. The subject of this unjust legislation,
which extended over a period of twelve years just preceding the war, was
the question of taxation. It is a well-grounded princi]3le of English
common laAV that the people, by their representatives in the House of
Commons, have the right of voting whatever taxes and customs are neces-
sary for the support of the kingdom. The American colonists claimed
the full rights of Englishmen, With good reason it was urged that the
general assemblies of colonies held the same relation to the American
people as did the House of Commons to the people of England. The
English ministers replied that Parliament, and not the colonial assemblies,
was the proper body to vote taxes in any and all parts of the British
empire. But we are not represented in Parliament, was the answer of
the Americans ; the House of Commons may therefore justly assess taxes
in England, but not in America, Many of the towns, boroughs and
shires in these British isles have no representatives in Parliament, and
yet the Parliament taxes them, replied the ministers, now driven to
sophistry. If any of your towns, boroughs and shires are not represented
in the House of Commons, they ought to be, was the American rejoinder ;
and there the argument ended. Such were the essential points of the
controversy. It is now proper to notice the several parliamentary acts
which the colonies complained of and resisted.
The first of these was the Importation Act, passed in 1733.
This statute was itself a kind of supplement to the old Navigation Act
of 1651. By the terms of the newer law exorbitant duties were laid on
all the sugar, molasses and rum imported into the colonies. At first the
payment of these unreasonable customs was evaded by the merchants,
and then the statute was openly set at naught. In 1750 it was further^
enacted that iron-works should not be erected in America. The man-
ufacture of steel was specially forbidden ; and the felling of pines, outside
of enclosures, was interdicted. All of these laws were disregarded and
denounced by the people of the colonies as being unjust and tyrannical.
In 1761 a strenuous effort was made by the ministry to enforce the Im-
portation Act. The colonial courts were authorized to issue to the king's
officers a kind of search-warrants, called Writs of Assistance. Armed
with this authority, petty constables might enter any and every place,
searching for and seizing goods which were suspected of having evaded
the duty. At Salem and Boston the greatest excitement prevailed. The
application for the writs was resisted before the courts. James Otis, an
288 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
able and temperate man, pleaded eloquently for colonial rights, and de-
nounced the parliamentary acts as unconstitutional. The address was a
masterly defence of the peoj)le, and produced a profound sensation through-
out the colonies. Already there were hints at resistance by force of arms.
In 1763, and again in the following year, the English ministers
undertook to enforce the law requiring the payment of duties on sugar
and molasses. The officers of the admiralty were authorized to seize and
confiscate all vessels engaged in the unlawful trade. Before the passage
of this act was known at Boston, a great town-meeting was held. Samuel
Adams was the orator. A powerful argument was produced showing
conclusively that under the British constitution taxation and representa-
tion were inseparable. Nevertheless, vessels from the English navy were
sent to hover around the American harbors. A great number of mer-
chantmen bearing cargoes of sugar and wine were seized; and the colonial
trade with tlie West Indies was almost destroyed.
The year 1764 witnessed the first formal declaration of the purpose
of Parliament to tax the colonies. Mr. Grenville was now prime minis-
ter. On the 10th of JMarch a resolution was adopted by the House of
Commons declaring that it would be proper to charge certain stamp-
duties on the American colonies. It was announced that a bill embody-
ing this principle would be prepared by the ministers and presented at
the next session of Parliament. In the mean time, the news of the pro-
jDOsed measure was borne to America. Universal excitement and indig-
nation prevailed in the colonies. Political meetings became the order of
the day. Orators were in great demand. The newspapers teemed with
arguments against the proposed enactment. Resolutions were passed by
the people of almost every town. Formal remonstrances were addressed
to the king and the two houses of Parliament. Agents were appointed
by the colonies and sent to London in the hope of preventing the passage
of the law.
A new turn was now given to the controversy. The French and
Indian War had just been concluded with a treaty of peace. Great
Britain had incurred a heavy debt. The ministers began to urge that the
expenses of the war ought to be borne by the colonies. The Americans
replied that England ought to defend her colonies, from motives of
humanity; that in the prosecution of tlie war the colonists had aided
Great Britain as much as Great Britain had aided them ; that the cession
of Canada had amply remunerated England for her losses ; that it was
not the payment of money which the colonies dreaded, but the surrender
of their liberties. It was also added that in case of another war ^the
American States would try to fight their own battles.
CAUSES. 289
Early in March of 1765, the EngHsh Parliament, no longer guided
by the counsels of Pitt, passed the celebrated Stamp Act. In the House
of Commons the measure received a majority of five to one. In the
House of Lords the vote was unanimous. At the time of the passage of
the act the king was in a fit of insanity, and could not sign the bill. On
the 22d of the month the royal assent was given by a board of commis-
sioners acting for the king. "The sun of American liberty has set,'*
wrote Benjamin Franklin to a friend at home. " Now we must light the
lamps of industry and economy." " Be assured," said the friend, in reply,
" that we shall light torches of another sort." And the answer reflected
the sentiment of the whole country.
The provisions of the Stamp Act were briefly these : Every note,
bond, deed, mortgage, lease, license and legal document of whatever sort,
required in the colonies, should, after the 1st day of the following No-
vember, be executed on paper bearing an English stamp. This stamped
paper was to be furnished by the British government ; and for each sheet
the colonists were required to pay a sum varying, according to the nature
of the document, from three pence to six pounds sterling. Every colonial
pamphlet, almanac and newspaper was- required to be printed on paper
of the same sort, the value of the stamps in this case ranging from a half-
penny to four pence ; every advertisement was taxed two shillings. No
contract should be of any binding force unless written on paper bearing
the royal stamp.
The news of the hateful act swept over America like a thunder-
cloud. The people were at first grief-stricken ; then indignant ; and then
wrathful. Crowds of excited men surged into the towns, and there were
some acts of violence. The muffled bells of Philadelphia and Boston
rung a funeral peal ; and the people said it was the death-knell of liberty.
In New York a copy of the Stamp Act was carried through the streets
with a death's-head nailed to it, and a placard bearing this inscription :
The Folly of England and the Euin of America., The general
assemblies were at first slow to move ; there were many loyalists among
the members ; and the colonial governors held their offices by appointment
of the king. It was hazardous for a provincial legislator to say that an
act of the British Parliament was the act of tyrants. But the younger
representatives, hot-blooded as well as patriotic, did not hesitate to ex-
press their sentiments. In the Virginia House of Burgesses there was a
memorable scene.
Patrick Henry, the youngest member of the House, an uneducated
mountaineer recently chosen to represent Louisa county, waited for some
older deleL!;ate to lead the burgesses in opposition to Parliament, But the
290
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
older members hesitated or went home. Offended at this lukewarmness,
Henry in his passionate way snatched a blank-leaf out of an old law-
book and hastily drew up a series of fiery resolutions, declaring that the
Virginians were Eng-
lishmen with English
rights ; that the people
of Great Britain had
the exclusive privilege
of voting their own
taxes, and so had the
Americans; that the
colonists were not
bound to yield obedi-
ence to any law im-
posing taxation on.
them ; and that who-
ever said the contrary
was an enemy to the
country. The resolu-
tions were at once laid
before the house.
A violent de-
bate ensued, in which
the patriots had the
best of the argument.
It was a moment of
intense interest. Two
future Presidents of the United States were in the audience ; Washington
occupied his seat as a delegate, and Thomas Jefferson, a young collegian,
stood just outside of the railing. The eloquent and audacious Henry
bore down all opposition. " Tarquin and Caesar had each his Brutus,"
said the indignant orator ; " Charles I. had his Cromwell, and George
III. — " " Treason !" shouted the speaker. " Treason ! treason !" exclaimed
the terrified loyalists, springing to their feet. " — And George III. may
})rofit by their example," continued Henry ; and then added as he took
his seat, " If that be treason, make the most of it !" The resolutions were
put to the house and carried ; but the majorities on some of the votes were
small, and the next day, when Henry was absent, the most violent par-
agraph was reconsidered and expunged : some of the members were
greatly frightened at their own audacity. But the resolutions in their
entire form liad gone before the country as the formal expression of the
PATKICK HENBY.
CAUSES. 291
oldest American commonwealth, and the effect on the other colonies was
like the shock of a battery.
Similar resolutions were adopted by the assemblies of New York
and Massachusetts — in the latter State before the action of Virgmia was
known. At Boston, James Otis successfully agitated the question of an
American Congress. It was proposed that each colony, acting withou<
leave of the king, should appoint delegates, who should meet in the fol-
lowing autumn and discuss the affairs of the nation. The proposition was
favorably received ; nine of the colonies appointed delegates ; and on the
\ 7th of October the First Colonial Congress assembled at New York,
y There were twenty-eight representatives : Timothy Ruggles of Massachu-
setts was chosen president. After much discussion a Declaration of
Rights was adopted setting forth in unmistakable terms that the Amer-
ican colonists, as Englishmen, could not and would not consent to be
taxed but by their own representatives. Memorials were also prepared
and addressed to the two houses of Parliament. A manly petition, pro-
fessing loyalty and praying for a more just and humane policy toward
his American subjects, was directed to the king.
The 1st of November came. On that day the Stamp Act was to
take effect. During the summer great quantities of the stamped paper
had been prepared and sent to America. Ten boxes of it were seized by
the people of New York and openly destroyed. In Connecticut, the
stamp-officer was threatened with hanging. In Boston, houses were de-
stroyed and the stamps given to the winds and flames. Whole cargoes
of the obnoxious paper were reshipped to England ; and every stamp-
officer in America was obliged to resign or leave the country. By the
1st of November there were scarcely stamps enough remaining to furnish
after times with specimens. The day was kept as a day of mourning.
The stores were closed ; flags were hung at half mast ; the bells were
tolled ; effigies of the authors and abettors of the Stamp Act were borne
about in mockery, and then burned. The people of New Hampshire
formed a funeral procession and buried a coffin bearing the inscription of
Liberty. A cartoon was circulated hinting at union as the remedy for
existing evils. The picture represented a snake broken into sections.
Each joint was labeled with the initials of a colony ; the head was marked
" N. E." for New England ; and the title was Join or Die !
At first, legal business was almost entirely suspended. The court-
houses were shut up. Society was at a standstill ; not even a marriage
license could be legally issued. By and by, the people breathed more
freely ; the offices were opened, and business went on as before ; but was
not transacted with stamped paper. It was at this juncture that the
292 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
patriotic society known as the Sons of Liberty was organized. The
members were pledged to oppose British tyranny to the utmost, and to
defend with their lives the freedom of the colonies. Equally important
was the action of the colonial merchants. The importers of New York,
Boston and Philadelphia entered into a solemn compact to purchase no
more goods of Great Britain until the Stamp Act should be repealed„
And the people, applauding the action of their merchants, cheerfully de-
nied themselves of all imported luxuries.
Great was the wrath of the British government when the news of
these proceedings was borne across the ocean. But a large party of Eng-
lish tradesmen and manufacturers sided with the colonists. Better still,
some of the most eminent statesmen esj)oused the cause of America. Even
Lord Camden in the House of Lords spoke favorably of colonial rights.
Before the House of Commons Mr. Pitt delivered a powerful address.
" You have," said he, " no right to tax America. I rejoice that America
has resisted. Three millions of our fellow-subjects so lost to every sense
of virtue as tamely to give up their liberties would be fit instruments to
make slaves of the rest." The new Whig prime minister, the marquis
of Rockingham, was also a friend of the colonies, and looked with dis-
favor on the legislation of his predecessor. On the 18th of March, 1766,
the Stamp Act was formally repealed. As a kind of balm to soothe the
wounded feelings of the Tories — as the adherents of Grenville were now
called — a su})plemental resolution was added to the repeal declaring that
I'^arliament had the right to bind the colonies in all cases whatsoever:
The joy both in England and America was unbounded. The
vessels in the river Thames were decked with flags, and the colonial
orators spoke to enthusiastic crowds gathered around bonfires. There was
a great calm in all the country ; but it M^as only the lull before the com-
ing of a greater storm. A few months after the repeal of the Stamp Act
the ministry of Rockingham was dissolved and a new cabinet formed
under tlie leadership of Pitt, who was now made earl of Chatham. Un-
fortunately, liowever, the prime minister was for a long time confined by
sickness to his home in the country. During his absence, ]Mr. Towns-
hend, chancellor of the exchequer, in a moment of unparalleled iolly,
brought forward a new scheme for taxing America. On the 29th of June,
1767, an act was passed imposing a duty on all the glass, paper, painters'
colors and tea which should thereafter be imported into the colonies.
At the same time a resolution was adopted suspending the powers of the
general assembly of New York until that body should vote certain sup-
plies for the royal troops stationed in the province. A more rash and
disastrous piece of legislation never was enacted.
CAUSES. 293
All the smothered resentment of the colonies burst out anew.
Another agreement not to purchase British goods was immediately en-
tered into by the American merchants. The newspapers were filled with
bitter denunciations of Parliament. Early in 1768 the assembly of Mas-
sachusetts adopted a circular calling upon the other colonies for assistance
in the effort to obtain redress of grievances. The ministers were enraged
and required the assembly in the king's name to rescind their action, and
to express regret for that " rash and hasty proceeding." Instead of that,
the sturdy legislature reaffirmed the resolution by a nearly unanimous
vote. Thereupon Governor Bernard dissolved the assembly; but the
members would not disperse until they had prepared a list of charges
against the governor and requested the king to remove him.
In the month of June fuel was added to the flame. A sloop,
charged with attempting to evade the payment of duty, was seized by the
custom-house officers. The people rose in a mob ; attacked the houses
of the officers, and obliged the occupants to seek shelter in Castle William,
at the entrance of the harbor. The governor now appealed to the min-
isters for help; and General Gage, commander-in-chief of the British
forces in America, was ordered to bring from Halifax a regiment of reg-
ulars and overawe the people. On the 1st of October the troops, seven
hundred strong, marched with fixed bayonets into the capital of Mas-
sachusetts. The people were maddened by this military invasion of their
city. When the governor required the selectmen of Boston to provide
quarters for the soldiers, he was met with an absolute refusal ; and the
troops were quartered in the state-house.
In February of 1769, Parliament advanced another step toward
war. The people of Massachusetts were declared rebels, and the governor
was directed to arrest those deemed guilty of treason and send them to ^
England for trial. The general assembly met this additional outrage
with defiant resolutions. Scenes almost as violent as these were at the
same time enacted in Virginia and North Carolina. In the latter State
a popular insurrection was suppressed by Governor Tryon; the insur-
gents, escaping across the mountains, obtained lands of the Cherokees, and
became the founders of Tennessee.
Early in 1770 a serious affi:'ay occurred in New York. The
soldiers wantonly cut down a liberty pole which had stood for several
years in the park. A conflict ensued, in which the people came out best ;
another pole was erected in the northern part of the city. On the 5th
of March a more serious difficulty occurred in Boston. An altercation
had taken place between a party of citizens and the soldiers. A crowd
gathered, surrounded Captain Preston's company of the city guard, hooted
294 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
at them, and dared them to fire. At length the exasperated soldiers dis-
charged a volley, killing three of the citizens and wounding several others.
This outrage, known as the Boston Massacre, created a profound sensa-
tion. The city was ablaze with excitement. Several thousand men
assembled under arms. Governor Hutchinson came out, promising that
justice should be done and trying to appease the multitude. The brave
Samuel Adams spoke for the people. An immediate withdrawal of the
troops from the city was demanded, and the governor was obliged to
yield. Captain Preston and his company were arrested and tried for
murder. The prosecution was conducted with great spirit, and two of
the offenders were convicted of manslaughter.
On the very day of the Boston massacre. Lord North, who had
become prime minister, secured the passage by Parliament of an act re-
pealing all the duties on American imports except that on tea. The
exception was made only to show that the right of taxing the colonies
was not relinquished. The merchants of New York and Boston at once
relaxed their non-importation agreement except so far as it related to tea ;
to that extent the compact was retained; and the people volimta.ri]3r
pledged themselves to use no more tea until the duty should be uncon-
ditionally repealed. The antagonism toward the mother country was
abating somewhat, when in 1772 an act was passed by Parliament requir-
ing that the salaries of the governor and judges of IVIassachusetts should
be paid out of the colonial revenues without consent of the assembly.
That body retaliated by a declaration that the parliamentary statute "was
a violation of the chartered rights of the people, and therefore void.
About the same time the Gaspee, a royal schooner which had been annoy-
ing the people of Providence, was boarded by a company of patriots and
burned.
In 1773 the ministers attempted to enforce the tea-tax by a strat-
agem. Owing to the duty, the price of tea in the American market iiad
been doubled. But there was no demand for the article ; for the people
would not buy. As a consequence the warehouses of Great Britain were
stored with vast quantities of tea, awaiting shipment to America. Par-
liament now removed the export duty which had hitherto been charged
on tea shipped from England. The price was by so much lowered ; and
the ministers i>ersuaded themselves that, when the clieaper tea was offered
in America, the silly colonists would pay their own import duty without
suspicion or complaint.
To carry out this scheme English ships were loaded with tea for
the American market. Some of the vessels reached Charleston ; the tea
was landed, but the people forbade its sale. The chests were stored in
CA USES.
295
moulclj cellars, and the contents ruined. At Xew York and Philadelphia
the ports were closed and the ships forbidden to enter. At Boston the
vessels entered the harbor. The tea had been consigned to Governor Hut-
chinson and his friends ; and special precautions were taken to prevent a
failure of the enterprise. But the authorities stubbornly stood their
ground, and would not permit the tea to be landed. On the 16th of De-
cember the dispute was settled in a memorable manner. There was a great
town-meeting at which seven thousand people were assembled. Adama
and Quincy spoke to
the multitudes. Eve-
ning came on, and the
meeting was about to
adjourn, when a war-
whoop was heard, and
about fifty men dis-
guised as Indians pass-
ed the door of the Old
South Church. The
crowd followed to
Griffin's wharf, where
the three t e a-s hips
were at anchor. Then
everything became
quiet. The disguised
men quickly boarded
the vessels, broke open
the three hundred and
forty chests of tea that
composed the cargoes,
and poured the con-
tents into the sea.
Such was THE Boston Tea-Party.
Parliament made haste to find revenge. On the last day of March,
1774, THE Boston Port Bill was passed. It was enacted that no
kind of merchandise should any longer be landed or shipped at the
wharves of Boston. The custom-house was removed to Salem, but the
people of that town refused the benefits which were proffered by the hand
of tyranny. The inhabitants of Marblehead tendered the free use of
their warehouses to the merchants of Boston. The assembly stood stoutly
by the cause of the people. When the news of the passage of the Port
Bill reached Virginia, the burgesses at once entered a protest on the
SAMTTEL ADAMS.
296 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
journals of the house. AYhen Governor Dunmore ordered the members
to their homes, they met in another place, and passed a recommendation
for a general congress of the colonies. On the 20th of May the vener-
ated charter of Massachusetts was annulled by act of Parliament. The
people were declared rebels ; and the governor was ordered to send
abroad for trial all persons who should resist the royal officers. The
colonial assembly made answer by adopting a resolution that the powers
of language were not sufficient to express the impolicy, injustice, in-
humanity and cruelty of the acts of Parliament.
In September the Second Colonial Congeess assembled at
Philadelphia. Eleven colonies were represented. It was unanimously
agreed to sustain Massachusetts in her conflict with a wicked ministry.
One address was sent to the king ; another to the English nation ; and
another to the people of Canada. Before adjournment a resolution was
adopted recommending the suspension of all commercial intercourse with
Great Britain until the wrongs of the colonies should be redressed. Par-
liament immediately retaliated by ordering General Gage, who had been
recently appointed governor of Massachusetts, to reduce the colonists by
force. A fleet and an army of ten thousand soldiers were sent to America
to aid in the work of subjugation.
In accordance with the governor's orders, Boston Neck was seized
and fortified. The military stores in the arsenals at Cambridge and
Charlestown were conveyed to Boston; and the general assembly was
ordered to disband. Instead of doing so, the members resolved them-
selves into a provincial congress, and voted to equip an army of twelve
thousand men for the defence of the colony. There was no longer any
hope of a peaceable adjustment. The mighty arm of Great Britain was
stretched out to smite and crush the sons of the Pilgrims. The colonists
were few and feeble ; but they were men of iron wills "vvho had made up
their minds to die for liberty. It was now the early spring of 1775, and
the day of battle was at hand.
THE BEGINNING. 297
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
THE BEGINNING.
AS soon as the intentions of General Gage were manifest, the people
of Boston, concealing their ammunition in cart-loads of rubbish,
conveyed it to Concord, sixteen miles away. Gage detected the move-
ment, and on the night of the 18th of April despatched a regiment of
eight hundred men to destroy the stores. Another purpose of the ex])0.-
dition was to capture John Hancock and Samuel Adams, who were suj)-
posed to be hidden at Lexington or Concord. The fact was that they
were not hidden anywhere, but were abroad encouraging the people.
The plan of the British general was made with great secrecy ; but the
patriots were on the alert, and discovered the movement.
About midnitrht the resriment, under command of Colonel Siaitli
and Major Pitcairn, set out for Concord. The people of Boston, Charles-
town and Cambridge were roused by the ringing of bells and the firing
of cannons. Two hours before, the vigilant Joseph Warren had de-
spatched William Dawes and Paul Revere to ride with all speed to Lex-
ington and to spread the alarm through the country^ Against two o'clock
in the morning the minute-men were under arms ; and a company of a
hundred and thirty had assembled on the common at Lexington. The
patriots loaded their guns and stood ready ; but no enemy appeared, and
it was agreed to separate until the drum-beat should announce the hour
of danger. At five o'clock the British van, under command of Pitcairn,
came in sight. The provincials to the number of seventy reassembled ;
Captain Parker was their leader. Pitcairn rode up and exclaimed:
" Disperse, ye villains ! Throw down your arms, ye rebels, and dis-
perse !" The minute-men stood still ; Pitcairn discharged his pistol at
them, and with a loud voice cried, " Fire !" The first volley of the
Revolution whistled through the air, and sixteen of the patriots, nearly a
fourth of the whole number, fell dead or wounded. The rest fired a few
random shots, and then dispersed.
The British pressed on to Concord; but the inhabitants had re-
moved the greater part of the stores to a place of safety, and there was
but little destruction. Tm^o cannons were spiked, some artillery carriao-es
298 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
burned, and a small quantity of ammunition thrown into a mill-pond.
While the British were ransacking the town the minute-men began to
assemble from all quarters. Attempting to enter the village, the patriots
encountered a company of soldiers who were guarding the North Bridge,
over Concord River. Here the Americans, for the first time, fired under
orders of their ofl&cers, and here two British soldiers were killed. The
bridge was taken by the provincials, and the enemy began a retreat^ — firet
into the town, and then through the town on the road to Lexington.
This was the signal for the minute-men to attack the foe from every side.
For six miles the battle w^as kept up along the road. Hidden behind
rocks, trees, fences and barns, the patriots poured a constant fire upon the
thinned ranks of the retreating enemy. Nothing but good discipline and
reinforcements which, under command of Lord Percy, met the fugitives
just below Lexington, saved the British from total rout and destruction.
The fight continued to the precincts of Charlestown, the militia becoming
more and more audacious in their charges. At one time it seemed that
the whole British force would be obliged to surrender. Such a result
was prevented only by the fear that the fleet would burn the city. The
American loss in this the first battle of the war was forty-nine killed,
thirty-four wounded and five missing ; that of the enemy was two hundred
and seventy-three — a greater loss than the English army sustamed on the
IHains of Abraham.
The battle of Lexington fired the country. Within a few days an
army of twenty thousand men had gathered about Boston. A line of
entrenchments encompassing the city was drawn from Roxbury to Chel-
sea. To drive Gage and the British into the sea was the common talk
in that tumultuous camp. And the number constantly increased. John
Stark came down at the head of the New Hampshire militia. Israel
Putnam, with a leather waistcoat on, was helping some men to build a
stone wall on his fiirm when the news from Lexington came flying.
Hurrying to the nearest town, he found the militia already nuistered.
Bidding the men follow as soon as possible, he mounted a horse and rode
to Cambridge, a distance of a hundred miles, in eighteen hours. Rhode
Island sent her quota under the brave Nathaniel Greene. Benedict
Arnold came with the provincials of New Haven, Ethan Allen, of
Vermont, made war in the other direction.
This daring and eccentric man was chosen colonel by a company of
two hundred and seventy patriots who had assembled at Bennington.
Before the battle of Lexington, the legislature of Connecticut had pri-
vately voted a thousand dollars to encourage an expedition against Ticon-
deroga. To capture this important fortress, with its vast magazine of
THE BEGINNING. 299
stores was the object of Allen and the audacioas mountaineers of whom he
was the leader. Benedict Arnold left Cambridge, and joined the expe-
dition as a private. On the evening of the 9th of May, the force, whose
movements had not been discovered, reached the ea.stern shore of Lake
Champlain, opposite Ticonderoga.
Only a few boats could be procured; and when day broke on th
following morning, but eighty-three men had succeeded in crossing. With
this mere handful — for the rest could not be waited for — Allen, with
Arnold by his side, made a dash, and gained the gateway of the fort.
The sentinel was driven in, closely followed by the mountaineers, who set
up such a shout as few garrisons had ever heard. Allen's men hastily
faced the barracks and stood ready to fire ; he himself rushed to the
quarters of Delaplace, the commandant, and shouted for the incumbent to
get up. The startled official thrust out his head. " Surrender this fort
instantly," said Allen. " By what authority ?" inquired the astounded
officer. " In the name of the great Jehovah and the Continental Con-
gress !" * said Allen, flourishing his sword. Delaplace had no alternative.
The garrison, numbering forty-eight, were made prisoners and sent to
Connecticut. A fortress which had cost Great Britain eight million
pounds sterling was captured in ten minutes by a company of undiscij)-
lined j)rovincials. By this daring exploit a hundred and twenty cannon
and vast quantities of military stores fell into the hands of the Americans.
Two days afterward Crown Point was also taken without the loss of life.
On the 25th of May, Generals Howe, Clinton and Burgoyne arrived
at Boston. They brought with them powerful reinforcements from Eng-
land and Ireland ; the British army was augmented to more than ten thou-
sand men. Gage, becoming arrogant, issued a proclamation, branding
those in arms as rebels and traitors, offering pardon to all Avho would
submit, but excepting Samuel Adams and John Hancock ; these two were
to suffer the penalty of treason — provided Gage could inflict it. It was now
rumored — and the rumor was well founded — that the British were ai^out
to sally out of Boston with the purpose of burning the neighboring towns
and devastating the country. The Americans determined to anticipate
this movement by seizing and fortifying Bunker Hill, a height which
commanded the peninsula of Charlestown.
On the night of the 16tli of June the brave Colonel Prescott,
grandfather of Prescott the historian, was sent with a thousand men to
occupy and entrench the hill. Marching by way of Charlestown Neck,
* This Baying will appear especially amusing when it is remembered that the "Conti-
nental Congress" referred to did not convene until about six hours after Ticonderoga was
captured.
300
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
>v< .?^
the j^rovincials came about eleven o'clock to the eminence which they
were instructed to fortify. Prescott and his engineer Gridley, not liking
the position of Bunker Hill, proceeded down the peninsula seven hundred
yards to another height, afterward called Breed's Hill. The latter was
witliin easy cannon range of Boston. On this summit a redoubt eight
rods squai'e was planned by the engineer ; and there, from midnight to
day-dawn, the men worked in silence. The British ships in the harbor
were so near that the Americans could hear the sentinels on deck repeat-
ing the night call, " All is well." The works were not yet completed
when morning revealed the new-made redoubt to the astonished British
of Boston.
" We must carry those works immediately," said General Gage to
his officers. For he saw that Prescott's cannon now commanded the city.
As soon as it was light, the ships in
the harbor began to cannonade the
American position. The British bat-
teries on Copp's Hill also opened a
heavy fire. But little damage was
done in this way ; and the Americans
returned only an occasional shot ; for
their supply of ammunition was very
limited. Just after noon a British
column of about three thousand vet-
erans, commanded by Generals Howe
and Pigot, landed at Morton's Point.
The plan was to carry Breed's Plill
by assault. The Americans num-
bered in all about fifteen hundred. They were worn out witli toil and
hunger ; but there was no quailing in the presence of the enemy. During
the cannonade Prescott climbed out of the defences and walked leisurely
around the parapet in full view of the British officers. Generals Putnam
and Warren volunteered as privates, and entered the trenches. At three
o'clock in the afternoon Howe ordered his column forward. At the same
time every gun in the fleet and batteries was turned upon the American
r-osition. Charlcstown was wantonly set on fire and four hundred build-
ings burned. Thousands of eager spectators climbed to the house-tops
in Boston and waited to behold the shock of battle. On came the British
in a stately and imjiosing column.
The Americans reserved their fire until the advancing line was
within a hundred and fifty feet. " Fire !" cried Prescott ; and instantly
from breastwork and redoubt every gun was discharged. The front rank
V tl ■■■- ii
SCENE OF THE BATTLE OF BUNKER
HILL, 1775.
THE BEGINNING. 301
of the British melted away ; there was a recoil, and fifteen minutes after-
ward a precipitate retreat. Beyond musket range Howe rallied his men
and led them to the second charge. Again the American fire was with-
held until the enemy was but a few rods distant. Then with steady aim
volley after volley was poured upon the charging column until it was
broken and a second time driven into flight.
The British ofiicers were now desperate. The vessels of the fleet
changed position until the guns were brought to bear upon the inside of
the American works. For the third time the assaulting column was put
in motion. The British soldiers came on with fixed bayonets up the
hillside strewn with the dead and dying. The Americans had but three
or four rounds of ammunition remaining. These were expended on the
advancing enemy. Then there was a lull. The British clambered over
the ramparts. The provincials clubbed their guns and hurled stones at
the assailants. It was in vain ; the heroic defenders of liberty were driven
out of their trenches at the point of the bayonet. Prescott lived through
the battle, but the brave Warren gave his life for freedom. The loss of
the British in this terrible engagement was a thousand and fifty-four in
killed and wounded. The Americans lost a hundred and fifteen killed,
three hundred and five wounded, and thirty-two prisonei-s. Prescott and
Putnam conducted the retreat by way of Charlestown Neck to Prospect
Hill, where a new line of entrenchments was formed which still com-
manded the entrance to Boston.
The battle of Bunker Hill- rather inspired than discouraged the
colonists. It was seen that the British soldiers were not invincible. To
capture a few more hills would cost General Gage his whole army. The
enthusiasm of war spread throughout the country. The news was borne
rapidly to the South, and a spirit of determined opposition was every-
where aroused. The people began to speak of the United Colonies
OF America. At Charlotte, North Carolina, the citizens ran together in
a hasty convention, and startled the country by making a declaration of
independence. The British ministers had little dreamed of raising such
a storm.
On the day of the capture of Ticonderoga the colonial Congress,
which had adjourned in the previous autumn, reassembled at Philadelphia.
Washington was there, and John Adams and Samuel Adams, Franklin
and Patrick Henry ; Jefferson came soon afterward. A last appeal was
addressed to the king of England ; and the infatuated monarch was plainly
told that the colonists had chosen war in preference to voluntary slavery.
Early in the session John Adams made a powerful address, in the course
of which he sketched the condition and wants of the country and of the
802 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
army. The necessity of appointing a commander-in-chief and the qual-
ities requisite in that high officer were dwelt upon ; and then the speaker
concluded by putting in nomination George Washington of Virginia. As
soon as his name was mentioned, Washington arose and withdrew from
the hall. For a moment he was overpowered with a sense of the respon-
sibility which was about to be put upon him, and to his friend Patrick
Henry he said with tears in his eyes : " I fear that this day will mark the
downfall of my reputation." On the 15th of June the nomination was
unanimously confirmed by Congress ; and the man who had saved the
wreck of Braddock's army was called to build a nation.
George Washington, descended from the distinguished family
of the Wessyngtohs in England, was born in Westmoreland county,
Virginia, on the 11th of February (Old Style), 1732. At the age of
eleven he was left, by the death of his father, to the sole care of a talented
and affectionate mother. His education was limited to the common
branches of learning, extending only to geometry and trigonometry. Sur-
veying was his favorite study. In his boyhood he was passionately foud
of athletic sports and military exercises. As he grew to manhood he >\ as
marked above all his companions for the dignity of his manners, the
soundness of his judgment and the excellence of his character. At the
age of sixteen he was sent by his uncle to survey a tract of land on the
Soutli Potomac, and for three years his life was in the wilderness. On
reaching his majority he was already more spoken of than any other
young man in the colony. The important duties which he performed in
the service of the Ohio Company, the beginning of his military ciireer
and his noted campaign with Braddock have already been narrated. After
the French and Indian War he was a member of the Virginia House of
Burgesses ; was then chosen a member of the Continental Congress ; and
was now called by that body to control the destinies of the unorganized
mass of men composing the American army. With great dignity he
accepted the appointment, refused all compensation beyond his actual
expenses, set out with an escort by way of New York, and reached Cam-
bridge fifteen days after the battle of Bunker Hill.
Washington's duties and responsibilities were overwhelming. Con-
gress had voted to raise and equip twenty thousand men, but the means
of doing so were not furnished. The colonies had not yet broken their
allegiance to the British Crown. For six months Congress stood waiting
for the king's answer to its address. The country was sound and patri'
otic; but its methods of action were irregular and uncertain. Washington
had a force of fourteen thousand five hundred men, but they were undis-
ciplined and insubordinate. The revenues and supplies of war were
THE BEGINNING. 303
almost wholly wanting. At the time of the battle of Bunker Hill the whole
army liad but twenty -seven half barrels of powder. The work of organ-
ization was at once begun. Four major-generals, one adjutant and eight
brigadiers were appointed; The army was arranged in three divisions.
The right wing, under General Ward, held Roxbury ; the left, commanded
by General Charles Lee, rested at Prospect Hill, near Charlestown Neck ;
the centre, under the immediate direction of the commander-in-chief, lay
at Cambridge. Boston was regularly invested, and the siege was pressed
with constantly increasing vigor.
During the summer and autumn of 1775, the king's authority was
overthrown in all the colonies. The royal governors either espoused the
cause of the people, were compelled to resign or were driven off in insur-
rections. Lord Dunmore, governor of Virginia, seized the public powder.
Patrick Henry led the people, and demanded restitution. The governor
was overawed, and paid the value of the powder. Fearing further aggres-
sion, he Avent on board a man-of-war, proclaimed freedom to the slaves,
raised a force of loyalists, met the provincials at the village of Great
Bridge near Norfolk, and was defeated. Obliged to retire from the coun-
try, he gratified his vindictive disposition by burning Norfolk.
The American colonies looked to Canada for sympathy and aid.
It was believed that the Canadians would make common cause asrainst
Great Britain. In order to encourage such a movement and to secure
possession of the Canadian government, an expedition was planned against
the towns on the St. Lawrence. Generals Schuyler and Montgomery
were placed in command of a division which was to proceed by way of
Lake Champlain and the river Sorel to St. John and Montreal. The
former fort was reached on the 10th of September, but the Americans,
finding the place too strong to be carried by assault, fell back twelve miles
to Isle-aux-Noix in the Sorel. This place General Schuyler fortified,
and then returned to Ticonderoga for reinforcements. Sickness detained
him there, and the whole command devolved on Montgomery. This
gallant officer returned to St. John and captured the fortress. Fort
Chambly, ten miles farther north, was also taken. Montreal was next
invested, and on the 13th of November obliged to capitulate.
Leaving garrisons in the conquered towns, Montgomery proceeded
with his regiment, now reduced to three hundred men, against Quebec.
This stronghold was already threatened from another quarter. Late in
the autumn. Colonel Benedict Arnold set out with a thousand men from
Cambridge, passed up the Kennebec and urged his way through the wil-
derness to the Chaudiere, intending to descend that stream to Point Levi.
The march was one of untold hardship and suffering. As winter came
304 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
on the men were brought to the verge of starvation. The daring leader
pressed on in the hope of gathering supplies from some unguarded French
village. Before his return the famishing soldiers had killed and devoured
every dog that could be found. Then the brave fellows gnawed the roots
of trees and ate their moose-skin moccasins until Arnold's return, when
the whole force proceeded to Quebec. JNIorgan, Greene and ISIeigs, all
three noted leaders of the Revolution, and Aaron Burr, one day to be-
come Vice-President of the United States, were in this company of suf-
fering heroes.
Arnold and his men, climbing to the Plains of Abraham, as Wolfe
had done sixteen years previously, offered battle. But the English gar-
rison of Quebec remained in their fortihcations awaiting an assault which
the Americans were not strong enough to make. Conscious of his weak-
ness, Arnold withdrew his men to Point aux Trembles, twenty miles up
the river, and there awaited the approach of Montgomery. When the
latter arrived, he assumed command of the whole force, which did not
exceed nine hundred effective men. Quebec was defended by greatly
superior numbers, well fortified and warmly quartered. For three weeks,
with his handful of men, Montgomery besieged the town, and then, rely-
ing only on the courageous valor of his men, determined to stake every ■=
Ihing on an assault.
It was the last day of December, 1775. Before daybreak the little
army was divided into four columns. The first division, under Mont-
gomery, was to pass down the St. Lawrence and attack the Lower To\vn
in the neighborhood of the citadel. The second column, led by Arnold,
was to sweep around the city to the north, attack by M-ay of the St.
(/harles, and join jSluntgomery in order to storm the Prescott Gate. The
other two divisions were to remain in the rear of the LTpper Town, making
■tiiigned attacks to draw the attention of the garrison. IMontgomery's
column reached the point from which the charge was to begin. A battery
lay just before, and it was thought that the gunners had not discovered
the assailants. " Men of New York," said the brave Montgomery, " you
will not fear to follow where your general leads ! Forward !" There
were masses of ice and clouds of blinding snow, and broken ground and
the cold gray light of morning. As the Americans were rushing forward,
all of a sudden the battery burst forth with a storm of grape-shot. At
the first discharge Montgomery and both of his aids fell dead. The
column was shattered. The men were heartbroken at the death of their
beloved general. They staggered a moment, then fell back, and returned
to Wolfe's Cove, above the city.
Arnold, ignorant of what had happened, fought his way into the
THE WORK OF 76. 305
Lower Town on the north. While leading the charge he was severely
wounded and borne to the rear. Captain Morgan, who succeeded him,
Jed his brave band farther and farther along the narrow and dangerous
streets until tie was overwhelmed and compelled to surrender. Arnold
retired with his broken remnant to a point three miles above the city.
.Reinforcements soon began to arrive ; but the smallpox broke out in the
camp, and active operations could not be resumed. As soon as the ice dis-
appeared from the St. Lawrence, Quebec was strengthened by the arrival
of fresh troops from England. Governor Carleton now began offensive
movements ; the Americans fell back from post to post, until, by the mid-
dle of the following June, Canada was entirely evacuated.
The worst calamity of the whole campaign was the death of Gen-
eral Richard Montgomery. He was one of the noblest of the many noble
men who gave their lives in the cause of American liberty. Born of an
illustrious Irish family, he became a soldier in his boyhood. He had
shared the toils and the triumph of Wolfe. To the enthusiasm of a warm
and affectionate nature he joined the highest order of military talents and
the virtues of an exalted character. Even in England his death was
mentioned with sorrow. New York, his adopted State, claimed his body,
brought his remains to her own metropolis and buried them with tears.
To after times the Congress of the nation transmitted his fame by erecting
a noble motiument.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
THE WORK OF 76.
AT last came the king's answer to the appeal of Congress. It was
such an answer as George III. and his ministers always made to the
petitioners for human rights. The colonies were insulted and spurned ;
their petition was treated with contempt. The king of England did not --/
know any such a body as the Continental Congress. The first thing
necessary was to disband the army and to submit without conditions.
Then the monarch would settle all questions with each colony separately.
By this offensive and tyrannical answer the day of independence was
brought nearer.
Meanwhile, General Howe had succeeded Gage in command of the
20
306
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
British troops in Boston, All winter long the city was besieged by
Washington. By the middle of February the American army had in-
creased to fourteen thousand men. The country became restless ; and
Congress urged the commander-in-chief to press the enemy with greater
vigor. Washington, knowing the insufficiency of his supplies, and fear-
ing the consequences of rashness more than the charge of inactivity, nar-=
rowed his lines, strengthened his works, and waited his opportunity. By
the first day of spring, 1776, he felt himself strong enough to risk an.
assault ; the officers of his staff thought otherwise, and a different plan
■was adopted.
On the north, Boston was commanded by the peninsula of Charles-
town ; on the south, by Dorchester Heights. Since the battle of Bunker
Hill the former position had been held by the British ; the latter was, as
yet, unoccupied. Washington now resolved to take advantage of the
enemy's oversight, to seize the
Heights and drive Howe out of
Boston. A strong entrenching part}""
was prepared and put under com-
mand of General Thomas. For two
TonS
) H
days the attention of the British was
drawn by a constant fire from the
American batteries. Then, on the
night of the 4th of March, the de-
tachment set out under cover of the
darkness, passed over Dorchester
Neck, and reached the Heights un-
perceived. Through the night the
Americans worked with an energy
rarely equaled. The British, dis-
tracted with the cannonade, noticed nothing unusual ; and when morning
dawned, they could hardly trust their senses. There was a line of for-
midable entrenchments frowning upon the city ; cannon were mounted,
and the Americans in force. Howe saw at a glance that he must imme-
diately carry the threatening redoubts or himself abandon Boston. En-
raged at being outgeneraled, he ordered Lord Percy to select a column
of two thousand four hundred men and storm the American works before
SIEGE OF BOSTON, 1776.
nightfall.
Percy put his men in order and proceeded as far as Castle Island,
intending to make the assault in the afternoon. Washington visited the
trenches and exhorted his men. It was the anniversary of the Boston
Massacre, and the soldiers were eager to avenge the deaths of their coun-
■F
1775 76
77
78
79
SO
81
Louis
George
XVI.
Capture of 3Io ntreal.
Quebec.— De&t h of Montgom
17,000 Hessi ans hired for
\ll, Amer ican army eva
TIRGINIA.
Norfolk burn
NORTH
SOUTH
CiEORG
CAROIil
Chart
CAROIil
lA.
1^ Ticond
Crown
eroga.
Point.
American
NEW YO RK.
New York
NEW JE
NEW HA
RHODE
tf^ Lexingt
9IASSAC
CON NEC
0^/;»»j7 Is
British
ed by Lord Du
NA.
eston.
NA.
Alliance
ery.
the American
cuates Canad
The British
fleet arrives
nmore.
with France.
Paul
Arrival of La
Fort Ed
army arrives
Ben
taken by the
land.
White Plains.
Zi\ Fort Wash-ingt'on.
RSEY. W f^"'"^-
Li^Princeton.
Savan-
nah.
Fayette.
bor.
ward abandon
at New York.
nington.
Saratoga, and
British.
war.
a.
ministry offer
in Chesapeake
Sunbury capt
MPSHIR
ISLAND.
071.
ker Hill.
HUSETTS
British evac
TICUT.
Washing ton appointed
Deelara
PENNSY EVANIA.
Silas Deane
Dr.Fr
commissioner
IWARYLA ND.
DErAW.lRE.
E.
W
uate Boston.
Tryon's expe
Win
ubbardton.
French
dition.
commander-in -chief.
tion of Inde pendence.
Philadel phia captured
sent to Fran ce. British
anklin, K^\Brandi/ici7ie.
to France, r^ Germantoum.
ed.
surrender of
, Stony
Jones^ victory.
War
terms to the
Bay.
f^King's
r^ Mount
El^tegfe of
ter-quarters at
Morristown.
fleet in Narra
ker Hill.
evacuate Phil
ured by the Br
Siege of Savan
Arn
An
Burgoyne.
Point.
P^ Spring
gansett Bay.
French
Penobscot Biv
between Ei
Americans.
Richmond
General G
Charleston.
k's Comer.
Sanders Crt
KJi Cowpen:
r*< Camdeii:
itish.
nah. j
old's treaso'
dr6 execute
adelphia.
Mutiny of
field.
Mutiny of
fleet arrive:
er.
Artie I
83
83
84
85
86
87
88
Retirement
Pre
of Lord North.
liminary trea
Supplement
nd. I^efin
o/ Gibraltar.
ty.
al treaty.
itive treaty.
4#
/ c:
m CDNi
789.^^
:ii. \
land and Holla
' p3 Siege
D. 1775-1:
HART ]
rned by Arno
Yorktovm.
Id.
Washington
Virgin
retires to Mou
ia cedes the
to the Gov
nt Vernon.
North-western
ernment.
territory
Virginia rat-
ifies the
Constitution.
ord.
ne's retreat.
Six.
Springs.
The
British evacu
ate Charlesto
n.
South Caro-
lina ratifies
the Consti-
tution.
Dissatis
The
British evacu
ate Savannah.
Georgia rati-
fifcc 'he Con-
stitution,
The
faction in the
British evacu^
army.
'ate New York.
Decimal
■
currency adop
New
the
ted.
New York ra-
tifies the
Constitution.
New Jersey
Pennsylvania
line,
line.
Jersey ratifies
Constitution.
Newport.
New Hamp-
shire ratifies
the Constitu'n
old's depreda
tions.
Massa
ter
chusetts cedes
ritory to the
Shay's
the North-wes
Government.
rebellion,
tern
Massachusetts
ratifies the
Constitution.
Connecticut
ratifies the
Constitution.
of Confeder
-
ation ratifie
Wa
d.
shington re
signs his com
Constitu
ven
Constitu
Constitu
tional Con-
tion.
tion adopted,
tion ratified.
Annapo
ven
lis Con-
tion.
tifies the
Constitution.
Dela
the
ware ratifies
Constitution.
THE WORK OF 76. 307
trj'^men. A battle was momentarily expected ; but while Percy delayed,
a violent storm arose and rendered the harbor impassable. It continued
to blow for a whole day, and the attack could not be made. Before the
following morning the Americans had so strengthened and extended their
fortifications that all thoughts of an assault were abandoned. Howe
found himself reduced to the humiliating extremity of giving up the
capital of New England to the rebels.
After some days there was an informal agreement between Washing-
ton and the British general that the latter should be allowed to retire
from Boston unmolested on condition that the city should not be burned.
On the 17th of March the arrangement was consummated, and the whole
British army went on board the fleet and sailed out of the harbor. Nearly
fifteen hundred loyalists, fearing the vengeance of the patriots, left their
homes and fortunes to escape with Howe. The American advance at
once entered the city. On the 20th, Washington made a formal entry at
the head of the triumphant army. The desolated town, escaping from
the calamities of a ten months' siege, broke forth in exultation. The
exiled patriots returned by thousands to their homes. The country was
wild with delight. From all quarters came votes of thanks and messages
of encouragement. Congress ordered a gold medal to be struck in honor
of AVashington, victorious over an enemy " for the first time put to flight."
The next care of the commander-in-chief was to strengthen the
defences of Boston. That done, he repaired with the main division of
the army to New York. It was not known to what part of the coast
Howe would direct his course ; and Washington feared that his antagonist
might make a sudden descent in the neighborhood of Long Island. Gen-
eral Lee pressed forward with the Connecticut militia, and reached New
York just in time to baffle an attempt of Sir Henry Clinton, whose
fleet arrived off Sandy Hook and threatened the city. Clinton next
sailed southward, and on the 3d of May was joined by Sir Peter
Parker, in command of another fleet, and Lord Cornwallis with two thou-
sand five hundred men. The force was deemed sufficient for any enter-
prise, and it was determined to capture Charleston.
In the mean time. General Lee had reached the South, and was
watching the movements of Clinton. The Carolinians rose in arms and
flocked to Charleston. The city was fortified ; and a fort, which com-
manded the entrance to the harbor, was built on Sullivan's Island. On
the 4th of June the British squadron came in sight, and a strong detach-
ment was landed on Long Island, a short distance east of Fort Sullivan.
There was a delay until the 28th of the month ; then the British fleet
began a furious bombardment of the fortress, which was commanded by
808 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Colonel Moultrie, Three nicu-of-war, attempting to pass the fort, were
stranded. Clinton ordered a storming-party to wade the channel between
Long Island and Sullivan's Island and carry the ^^^orks by assault ; but
the water was too deep to be ibrded, and Colonel Thompson, who was
stationed with a company of riflemen on the opposite bank, drove the
British back in confusion. For eight hours the vessels of the fleet poured
a tempest of balls upon the fort ; but the walls, built of the spongy pal-
metto, were little injured. The four hundred militiamen who composed
the garrison fought like veterans. The republican flag Avas shot away
and thrown outside of the parapet ; Sergeant Jasper leaped down from the
^vall, recovered the flag and set it in its place again. The fire from the
fleet was returned with great spirit ; and as evening drew on the British
were obliged to retire with a loss of more than two hundred men. Lord
Campbell, the royal governor of South Carolina, was killed, and Admiral
Parker was severely wounded. The loss of the garrison amounted in
killed and wounded to thirty-two. As soon as the British could repair
their shattered fleet they abandoned the siege and set sail for New York,
In honor of its brave defender the fort on Sullivan's Island was named
Fort Moultrie.
During the summer Washington's forces were augmented to about
twenty-seven thousand men ; but the terms of enlistment were constantly
expiring ; sickness prevailed in the camp ; and the effective force was but
little more than half as great as the aggregate. On the other hand. Great
Britain was making the vastest preparations. By a treaty with some of
the petty German States, seventeen thousand Hessian mercenaries were
hired to fight against America. George III. was going to quell "his re-
volted provinces by turning loose upon them a brutal foreign soldiery.
Twenty-five thousand additional English troops were levied ; an immense
squadron was fitted out to aid in the reduction of the colonies, and a
million dollars were voted for the extraordinary expenses of the war
department.
By these measures the Americans \vere greatly exasperated. Until
now it had been hoped that the difliculty with the mother country could
be satisfactorily adjusted without breaking allegiance to the British Crown.
The colonists had constantly claimed to be loyal subjects of Great Britain,
<lemanding only the rights and liberties of Englishmen. Now the case
eoemed hopeless ; and the sentiment of disloyalty spread with alarming
rapidit}\ The people urged the general assemblies, and the general
assemblies urged Congress, to a more decided assertion of sovereignty.
The legislature of Virginia led the way by advising in outspoken terms a
declaration of independence. Congress responded by recommending all
THE WORK OF 76. 309
the colonies to adopt such governments as might best conduce to the liap-
piness and safety of the people. This action was taken early in Ma}-, and
in the course of the following month nearly all the j)rovinces complied
with the recommendation.
Finally, on the 7th of June, 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia
offered a resolution in Congress declaring that the United Colonies are,
and of right ought to be, free and independent States ; that they are
absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown ; and that all political
connection between them and Great Britain is, and ought to be, dissolved.
A long and exciting debate ensued. The sentiment of independence
gained ground ; but there was still strong opposition to the movement.
After some days the final consideration of Lee's resolution was postponed
until the 1st of July. On the 11th of June a committee, consisting of
five members, was appointed to prepare a more elaborate and formal dec-
laration. Mr. Lee had been called home by sickness ; and his colleague,
Thomas Jefferson, was accordingly made chairman of the committee. The
other members were John Adams of Massachusetts, Benjamin Franklin
of Pennsylvania, Roger Sherman of Connecticut and Robert R. Livingston
of New York. The special work of preparing the paper was allotted to
Jefferson and Adams ; the latter deferred to the former, whose vigorous
style of writing specially fitted him for the task. The great document
was accordingly produced in Jefferson's hand, with a few interlinings by
Adams and Franklin.
On the 1st of July, Lee's resolution was taken up, and at the same
time the committee's report was laid before Congress. On the next day
the original resolution was adopted. During the 3d, the formal declara-
tion was debated with great spirit, and it became evident that the work
of the committee would be accepted. The discussion was resumed on the
morning of the 4th, and at two o'clock on the afternoon of that memorable
day the Declaration of American Independence was adopted by
a unanimous vote.
All day long the old bellman of the State House had stood in the
steeple ready to sound the note of freedom to the city and the nation. The
hours went by ; the gray-haired veteran in the belfry grew discouraged, and
began to say : " They will never do it — they will never do it." Just then
the lad who had been stationed below ran out and exclaimed at the top of
his voice, " Ring ! ring !" And the aged patriot did ring as he had never
rung before. The multitudes that thronged the streets caught the signal
and answered with shouts of exultation. Swift couriers bore the glad news
throughout the land. Everywhere the declaration was received with
enthusiastic applause. At Philadelphia the king's arms were torn doAvn
310 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
from the court-house and burned in the street. At Williamsburg,
Charleston and Savannah there were bonfires and illuminations. At
Boston the declaration was read in Faneuil Hall, while the cannon froiu
Fort Hill and Dorchester shook the city of the Puritans. At New York
the populace pulled down the leaden statue of George III. and cast it into
bullets. AVashington received the message with joy, and ordered the
declaration to be read at the head of each brigade. Former suffering and
future peril were alike forgotten in the general rejoicing.
The leading principles of the Declaration of Independence are
these : That all men are created equal ; that all have a natural right to
liberty and the pursuit of happiness ; that human governments are insti-
tuted for the sole purpose of securing the welfare of the people ; that the
• people have a natural right to alter their government whenever it becomes
destructive of liberty ; that the government of George III. had become
destructive of liberty ; that the despotism of the king and his ministers
could be shown by a long list of indisputable proofs — and the proofs are
given; that time and again the colonies had humbly petitioned for a
redress of grievances; that all their petitions had been spurned with
derision and contempt ; that the king's irrational tyranny over his Amer-
ican subjects was no longer endurable ; that an appeal to the sword is pref-
erable to slavery ; and that, therefore, the United Colonies of America are,
and of right ought to be, free and independent States. To the support
of this sublime declaration of principles the members of the Continental
Congress mutually pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred
honor.
On leaving Boston, General Howe sailed to Halifax. There he
remained until the middle of June, wlien he embarked his forces and
set sail for Sandy Hook. Early in July he landed a force of nine thou-
sand men on Staten Island. Thither Clinton came from the unsuccess-
ful siege of Charleston, and Admiral Howe, brother of General Howe, from
England. The whole British force, now gathered in the vicinity of New
York, amounted to fully thirty thousand men. Nearly half of them were
the hated Hessians whom the king of Great Britain had hired at thirty-
six dollars a head. Washington's army v/as inferior in numbers, poorly
equipped and imperfectly disciplined.
There was some delay in military operations ; for Lord Howe, the
admiral, had been instructed to try conciliatory measures with the Amer-
icans. First, he sent to the American camp an officer with a despatch
directed to George Washington, Esquire. Of course Washington refused
to receive a communication which did not recognize his official position.
In a short time Howe sent another message, addressed to George Wash-
THE WORK OF 76.
311
ington, etc., etc., etc. ; and the bearer, Avho was Howe's adjutant-general,
insisted that and-so-forth might be translated General of the American
A rmy. Washington was the last man in the world to be caught with a
subterfuge; and the adjutant was sent away. It was already well known
that Howe's authority extended only to granting pardons, and to unes-
sential matters about which the Americans were no longer concerned.
Washington therefore replied that since no offence had been committed
no pardon was required ; that the colonies were now independent, and
would defend themselves against all aggression.
Baffled in his efforts, Lord Howe and his brother determined to
begin hostilities. On the 22d of August the British, to the number of
ten thousand, landed on the south-western coast of Long Island, near the
village of New Utrecht. The Americans, about eight thousand strong,
commanded by Generals Sullivan and Stirling, were posted in the vicinity
of Brooklyn. The advance of the British was planned with great skill.
From Gravesend, where Howe's forces were landed, there were three
roads to Brooklyn ; the British army was accordingly arranged in three
divisions. The first column, commanded by General Grant, was to ad-
vance by way of Utrecht and the Narrows. The second division, com-
posed of the Hessians, under command of General Heister, was to proceed
to Flatbush, and thence to Bedford and Brooklyn. The third and strong-
est column, led by Clinton and Cornwallis, was to make a circuit to the
right as far as Flatland, reach the
Jamaica road, and pass by way of
Bedford to the rear of the American
left wing. All of the movements
were executed with perfect ease and
fatal precision.
The advance from Gravesend
began on the morning of the 27th of
August. Grant's division proceeded
as far as the hill now embraced in
Greenwood Cemetery, where he met
General Stirling with fifteen hundred
men; and the battle at once began.
But in this part of the field there was
no decisive result. Heister, in com-
mand of the British centre, advanced
beyond Flatbush, and engaged the main body of the Americans, under
General Sullivan. Here the battle began with a brisk cannonade, in
which the Hessians gained little or no ground until Sullivan was suddenly
BATTLE OF LONG ISLAND, 1//6.
312 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
alarmed by the noise of battle on his left and rear, and the battalions of
Clinton came rushing on the field.
For General Putnam, who had come over and taken command of
the entire force of the island, had, neglectful of Washington's orders,
failed to guard the passes on the left of the American army. During the
previous night Clinton had occupied the heights above the Jamaica road,
and now his force came down, unopposed and unperceived, by way of
Bedford. Sullivan found himself surrounded, cut off, hemmed in between
the two divisions of Clinton and Heister. From that moment it was only
a question as to what part of the army could be saved from destruction.
The men fought desperately, and many broke through the closing lines of
the British. The rest were scattered, killed or taken prisoners.
Cornwallis's division pressed on to cut off the retreat of Stirling.
At first the British were repulsed, and Stirling began his retreat toward
Brooklyn. At Gowanus Creek a number of his men were drowned and
many others captured; the rest reached the American lines in safety.
Before the battle was ended Washington arrived on the field, and his
soul was wrung with anguish at the sight. At first his army seemed
ruined ; but his resolute and tranquil spirit rose above the disasters of the
battle. Generals Stirling, Sullivan and Woodhull were all prisoners in
the hands of the enemy. Nearly a thousand patriot soldiers were killed,
wounded or missing. It seemed an easy thing for Clinton and Howe to
press on and capture all the rest. Yet in a few hours Washington
brought together his shattered forces, reorganized his brigades and stood
ready for an assault in the trenches back of Brooklyn.
During the 28th, Howe, who was a sluggish, sensual man, ate
pudding and waited for a fitter day. On the 29th there was a heavy
fog over island and bay and river. Washington, clearly perceiving that
he could not hold his position, and that his army was in great peril, re-
solved to withdraw to New York. The enterprise was extremely hazard-
ous, requiring secrecy, courage and despatch. By eight o'clock on that
memorable night every boat and transport that could be obtained was
lying at the Brooklyn ferry. There, under cover of the darkness, the
embarkation began. Washington personally superintended every move-
ment. All night witli muffled oars the boatmen rowed silently back and
forth, bearing the patriots to the northern side of the channel. At day-
light on the following morning, just as the last boatload was leaving the
wharf, the movement was discovered by the British. They rushed into
the American entrenchments, and found nothing there except a few worth-
less guns. After a severe battle which had cost him nearly four hundred
men, Howe had gained possession of Long Island — and nothing more
THE WORK OF 76. 31 S
General Greene, who was a competent judge, declared that Washington's
retreat was the most masterly he ever read or heard of.
The defeat on Long Island was very disastrous to the American
cause. The army was dispirited. As fast as their terms of enlistment
expired the troops returned to their homes. Desertions became alarm-
ino;ly frequent ; and it was only by constant exertion that Washington
kept his army from disbanding. To add to the peril, the British fleet
doubled Long Island and anchored within cannon-shot of New York.
Washington, knowing himself unable to defend the city, called a council
of war, and it was determined to retire to the Heights of Harlem. On
the 15th of September the British landed in force on the east side of
Manhattan Island, about three miles above New York. Thence they
extended their lines across the island to the Hudson, and took possession .
of the city. It was in this juncture of afiairs that Howe made overtures
of peace to Congress. General Sullivan was paroled and sent to Philadel-
phia as Howe's agent; but Congress was in no mood to be conciliated,
Franklin, on behalf of that body, wrote Howe a letter, telling him many
unpalatable truths about what might henceforth be expected from the
American colonies.
On the next day after the British gained possession of New York,
there was a skirmish between the advance parties of the two armies north
of the city. The Americans gained a decided advantage, and the British
were driven back with a loss of a hundred men. On the American side
the loss included Colonel Knowlton and Major Leitch — two valuable
officers — and nearly fifty privates. On the night of the 20th of Septem-
ber a fire broke out in New York and destroyed nearly five hundred
buildings. On the 16th of October, while the Americans were still in
their entrenchments above the city, Howe embarked his forces, passed
into Long Island Sound and landed in the vicinity of Westchester. The
object Avas to get upon the American left flank and cut oif communica-
tions with the Eastern States. Washington, ever on the alert, detected
the movement, put his army in motion and faced the British east of Har-
lem River. For some days the two generals manoeuvred, and on the
28th a battle was brought on at White Plains. Howe began the engage-
ment with a furious cannonade, which was answered with spirit. The
Americans were driven from one important position, but immediately re-
entrenched themselves in another. Night came on; Howe waited for
reinforcements, and Washington withdrew to the heights of North Castle,
Howe remained for a few days at White Plains, and then returned to
New York.
Washington, apprehending that the British would now proceed
314
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
SCENK Oy OPERATIONS ABOUT
NEW YORK, 177G.
against Philadelphia, crossed to the west bank of the Hudson and took
post with General Greene at Fort Lee. Four thousand men were left at
North Castle under command of General Lee.
Fort Washington, on Manhattan Island, five
miles north of the city, was defended by three
thousand men under Colonel Magaw. This
fort was a place of great natural and artificial
strength. The skill of its construction had
attracted the attention of Washington and led
to an acquaintance with the engineer, who
from that time forth, through the stormy vi-
cissitudes of nearly a quarter of a century, en-
joyed the unclouded confidence of his chief;
the engineer was Alexander Hamilton,
then a stripling of but twenty years of age.
On the 16th of November the British
attacked Fort Washington in overwhelming
force. The garrison made a stubborn defence.
More than five hundred of the assailants were
killed or wounded. But valor could not prevail against superior num-
bers, and Magaw, after losing a liundred and fifty men, was obliged to
capitulate. The garrison, numbering more than two thousand, were made
prisoners of war and crowded into the foul jails of New York. Two
days after the surrender, Cornwallis crossed the Hudson with a body of
six thousand men and marched against Fort Lee. Seeing that a defence
would onlv end in worse disaster, Washington hastily withdrew across the
Plackensack. All the baggage and military stores collected in Fort Lee
fell into the hands of the British, who at once pressed forward after the
retreating Americans. Washington with his army, now reduced to three
thousand men, crossed the Passaic to Newark ; but Cornwallis and Knyp^
hausen came hard after the fugitives. The patriots retreated to Elizabeth-
town, thence to New Brunswick, thence to Princeton, and finally to
Trenton on the Delaware. The British were all the time in close pursuit,
and the music of their bands was frequently heard by the rearguard of
the American army. Nothing but the consummate skill of Washington
saved the remnant of his forces from destruction. Despair seemed settling
on the country like a pall.
On the 8th of December, Washington crossed the Delaware, The
British essayed to do the same, but the American commander had secreted
or destroyed every boat within seventy miles. In order to effect his
passage, Cornwallis must build a bridge or wait for the freezing of the
THE WORK OF 76. 315
river. The latter course was chosen ; and the British army was stationed
in detachments in various towns and villages east of the Delaware. Tren-
ton was held by a body of nearly two thousand Hessians under Colonel
Rahl. It was seen that as soon as the river should be frozen the British
would march unopposed into Philadelphia. Congress accordingly ad-
journed to Baltimore ; and there, on the 20th of the month, a resolution
was adopted arming Washington with dictatorial powers to direct all the
operations of the war.
Meanwhile, the British fleet under command of Admiral Parker
had left New York for Narragansett Bay. On the same day that Wash-
ington crossed the Delaware the islands of Rhode Island, Prudence and
Conanicut were taken ; and the American squadron under Commander
Hopkins was blockaded in Blackstone River. During his retreat across
New Jersey, Washington had sent repeated despatches to General Lee, in
command of the detachment at North Castle, to join the main army as
soon as possible. Lee was a proud, insubordinate man, and virtually
disobeyed his orders. Marching- leisurely into New Jersey, he reached
Morristown. Here he tarried, and took up his quarters at an inn at
Basking Ridge. On the 13th of December, a squad of British cavalry
dashed up to the tavern, seized Lee and hurried him off to New York.
General Sullivan, who had recently been exchanged, now took command
of Lee's division, and hastened to join Washington. Fifteen hundred
volunteers from Philadelphia and vicinity were added, making the entire
American force a little more than six thousand.
The tide of misfortune turned at last. Washington saw in the
disposition of the British forces an opportunity to strike a blow for his
disheartened country. The leaders of the enemy were oif their guard.
They believed that the war was ended. Cornwallis obtained leave of
absence, left New Jersey under command of Grant, and made preparations
to return to England. The Hessians on the east side of the river were
spread out from Trenton to Burlington. Washington conceived the bold
design of crossing the Delaware and striking the detachment at Trenton
before a concentration of the enemy's forces could be effected. The
American army was accordingly arranged in three divisions. The first,
under General Cadwallader, was to cross the river at Bristol and attack
the British at Burlington. General Ewing with his brigade was to pass
over a little below Trenton for the purpose of intercepting the retreat.
Washington himself, with Greene and Sullivan and twenty-four hundred
men, was to cross nine miles above Trenton, march down the river and
assault the town. The movement was planned with the utmost secrecy
— the preparations made with prudence and care. Christmas night was
316
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
selected as the time ; for it was known that the Hessians would spend the
day in drinking and carousals.
About the 20th of the month, the weather became very cold, and
by the evening of the 25th the Delaware was filled with floating ice.
Ewing and Cadwallader were both baffled in their eiForts to cross the
river. Washington's division succeeded in getting over, but the passage
was delayed till three o'clock in the morning. All hope of reaching
Trenton before daybreak was at an end ; but Washington, believing thtit
the Hessians would sleep late after their revels, divided his army into two-
columns and pressed forward. One division, led by Sullivan, passed
down the river to attack the town on the west;
the other, commanded by Washington and Greene,
made a circuit to the Princeton road. The move-
ment was entirely successful. At eight o'clock
in the morning the American columns came rush-
ing into the village from both directions. The
astonished Hessians sprang from their quarters
and attempted to form in line. At the first onset
Colonel Rahl was mortally wounded. Forty or
fifty others fell before the volleys of the patriots.
For a few minutes there was confusion, and then
a cry for quarter. Nearly a thousand of tlie
dreaded Hessians threw down their arms and
begged for mercv. At the first alarm about six
hundred light horse and infantry had escaped
toward Bordentowu. All the rest were made prisoners of war. Before
nightfall Washington, with his victorious men and the "whole body of
captives, Avas safe on the other side of the Delaware.
The battle of Trenton roused the nation from despondency. Con-
fidence in the commander and hope in the ultimate success of the Amer-
ican cause were everywhere revived. The militia from the neighboring
T)rovinces flocked to the general's standard ; and fourteen hundre^l sol-
diers, whose term of enlistment now expired, cheerfully re-entered the
service. It was at this time that Robert Morris of Philadelphia, the great
financier of the Revolution, came forward with his princely fortune to
the support of his distressed country. As to Cornwallis, he found it nec-
essary to postpone his visit to England and hasten back to New Jersey.
Three days after his victory, Washington again crossed the Del-
aware and took post at Trenton. Here all the American detachments «i
the vicinity were ordered to assemble. To General Heath, in command
of the New England militia stationed at Peekskill, on the Hudson, Wash-
■/oli\iii\np,Q^
BATTLE OF TRENTON ANB
PRINCETON, 177G-7.
OPERATIONS OF 77. 317
ingtou sent orders to move into New Jersey. The British fell back from
their outposts on the Delaware and concentrated in great force at Prince-
ton. Cornwallis took command in person, and resolved to attack and
overwhelm' Washington at Trenton. So closed the year. Ten days
previously, Howe only waited for the freezing of the Delaware before
taking up his quarters in Philadelphia. Now it was a question whether
he would be able to hold a single town in New Jersey.
CHAPTER XL.
OPERATIONS OF '77.
ON the 1st of January, 1777, Washington's army at Trenton numbered
about five thousand men. On the next day Cornwallis approached
from Princeton with greatly superior forces. The British were exasper-
ated and the Americans resolute. During the afternoon there was severe
and constant skirmishing in the fields and along the roads to the east and
north of Trenton. As the columns of the enemy pressed on, Washington
abandoned the village and took up a stronger position on the south side
of Assanpink Creek. The British, attempting to force a passage, were
driven back ; it was already sunset, and Cornwallis deferred the attack
till the morrow.
2. Washington's position was critical in the extreme. To attempt to
recross the Delaware was hazardous. To retreat in any direction was to
lose all that he had gained by his recent victory. To be beaten in battle
was utter ruin. In the great emergency he called a council of war and
announced his determination to leave the camp by night, make a circuit
to the east, pass the British left flank and strike the detachment at Prince-
ton before his antagonist could discover or impede the movement. Orders
were immediately issued for the removal of the baggage to Burlington.
In order to deceive the enemy, the camp-fires along the Assanpink were
brightly kindled and a guard left to keep them burning through the night.
Then the army was put in motion by the circuitous route to Princeton.
Everything was done in silence, and the British sentries walked tlieir
beats until the morning light showed them a deserted camp. Just then
the roar of the American cannon, thirteen miles away, gave Cornwallis
aiotice of how he had been outgeneraled.
At sunrise Washington was entering Princeton. At the same mo-
318 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
inent the British regiments stationed there were marching out by the
Trenton road to reinforce Cornwallis. The Americans met them in the
edge of the village, and the battle at once began. The patriots, under
General Mercer, posted themselves behind a hedge, and were .doing good
work with their muskets until the British charged bayonets. Then the
militia gave way in confusion, and Mercer, one of the bravest of the brave,
received a mortal wound. But the Pennsylvania reserves and regulars
were at hand, led by the commander-in-chief. The valor of Washington
never shone with brighter lustre. He spurred among his flying men, who
rallied at his call. He rode between the hostile lines and reined his horse
within thirty yards of the enemy's column. There he stood. From both
sides there came a crash of musketry. Washington's aid drew his hat
over his eyes that he might not see the chieftain die. The wind tossed
up the smoke, and there, unhurt, was the sublime leader of the American
armies. The British were already broken and flying, with a loss of four
hundred and thirty men in killed, wounded and missing. The loss of
the Americans was small ; but the gallant Mercer was greatly lamented.
Washington had intended to press on to Brunswick and destroy the
enemy's magazines. His men, however, were too much exhausted for the
march. The legions of Cornwallis were already in hearing, and there
M'as no time for delay. Washington accordingly withdrew to the north,
and on the 5th of January took a strong position at !Morristown. Corn-
wallis hastened to New Brunswick to protect his stores. In a short time
the whole of New Jersey north of Newark and Elizabethtown was recov-
ered by the patriots. In all parts of the State the militia rose in arms ;
straggling parties of the British were cut off, and the outposts of the enemy
were kept in constant alarm. The Hessians, whose barbarous invasion
and brutal conduct had almost ruined the country, were the special objects
of patriot vengeance. Vexed by the perpetual assaults of partisan war-
fare, Cornwallis gradually contracted his lines, abandoning one post afl;er
another, until his whole force was cooped up in New Brunswick and
Amboy. The boastful British army that was to have" taken Philadelphia
now thought only of a safe return to New York.
In the early spring. General Howe despatched a fleet up the Hudson
to destroy the American stores at Peekskill. Macdougal, the command-
ant, finding himself too feeble to make a su" •''?^sful defence, blew up the
magazines and retreated. On the 13th of, ^ril Cornwallis marched a
division out of New Brunswick and surprised General Lincoln, who was
stationed at Boundbrook on the Raritan ; but the latter made good his
retreat Avith a trifling loss. On the 25th of the same month, General
Tryon with a detachment of two thousand men landed on the north shore
OPERATIONS OF 77. 319*
of Long Island Sound, and proceeded against Danbury, Connecticut.
After destroying a large quantity of stores and burning the town the
British began a retreat to the coast. Immediately they were attacked on
liank and rear by the exasperated patriots, who, led by the aged Wooster
and the daring Arnold, made charge after charge on the retreating foe.
Before regaining their shipping the British lost more than two hundred
men ; of the patriots about sixty were killed and wounded. The veteran
Wooster, now sixty-eight years of age, fell in this engagement.
A similar expedition, undertaken by the Americans, was more suc-
cessful. Colonel INIeigs, of Connecticut, learning that the British were
collecting stores at Sag Harbor, near the eastern extremity of Long Island,
gathered two hundred militiamen, and determined to surprise the post.
On the night of the 22d of May he embarked his men in whale-boats,
crossed the Sound, and reached Sag Harbor just before daydawn on the
following morning. The British, numbering a hundred, were over-
powered ; only four of them escaped ; five or six were killed, and the re-
maining ninety were made prisoners. A gun-ship, ten loaded transports
and a vast amount of stores were destroyed by the victorious patriots, who,
without the loss of a man, returned to Guilford with their captives. For
this gallant deed Colonel Meigs received an elegant sword from Congress.
Washington remained in his camp at Morristown until the latter
part of May. Cornwallis was still at New Brunswick, and it was neces-
sary that the American commander should watch the movements of his
antagonist. The patriot forces of the North were now concentrated on the
Hudson ; and a large camp, under command of Arnold, was laid out on
the Delaware. Both divisions were within supporting distance of Wash-
ington, who now broke up his winter-quarters and took an advantageous
position at Boundbrook, only ten miles from the British camp. Howe
now crossed over from New York, reinforced Cornwallis and threatened
an attack upon the American lines ; but Washington stood his ground,
and Howe pressed forward as far as Somerset Court-House, in the direc-
tion of the Delaware. The movement was only a feint intended to draw
Washington from his position ; but he was too wary to be deceived, and
the British fell back through New Brunswick to Amboy. The American
lines were now advanced as far as Quibbletown. While in this position,
HoAve, on the night of the '^ ^ of June, turned suddenly about and made
a furious attack on the A^^ ' 3an van ; but AVashington withdrew his
forces without serious loss and regained his position at Boundbrook.
Again the British retired to Amboy, and on the 30th of the month crossed
over to Staten Island. After more than six months of manceuvring and
fighting the invading army was fairly driven out of New Jersey.
320 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
On the lOth of July a brilliant exploit was performed in Rhode
Island. Colonel William Barton, of Providence, learning that Major-
General Preseott of the British army was quartered at a farm-house near
Newport, apart from his division, determined to capture him. On the
night of the 10th of July the daring colonel, with forty volunteers, em-
barked at Providence, dropped down the bay, and reached the island
near Prescott's lodgings. The movement was not discovered. The
British sentinel was deceived with a plausible statement, and then threat-
ened with death if he did not remain quiet. The patriots rushed forward,
burst open Prcscott's door, seized him in bed, and hurried him, half clad,
to the boats. The alarm was raised ; a squad of cavalry came charging
to the water's edge; but the provincials were already paddling out of
sight with their prisoner. This lucky exploit gave the Americans an
officer of equal rank to exchange for General Lee. Colonel Barton was
rewarded with promotion and an elegant sword.
Meanwhile, Congress had returned to Philadelphia. The American
government was at this time essentially weak in its structure and ineffi-
cient in action. Nevertheless, there was much valuable legislation which
tended to strengthen the army and the nation. But the most auspicious
sign that gladdened the j^atriots was the unequivocal sympathy of the
French. From the beginning of the contest the people of France had
espoused the American cause. Now, after the lapse of two years, their
sympathy became more outspoken and enthusiastic. True, the French
government would do nothing openly which was calculated to provoke a
war with Great Britain. Outwardly the forms and sentiments of peace
were preserved between the two nations ; but secretly the French rejoiced
at British misfortune and applauded the action of the colonies. Soon the
Americans came to understand that if money was required France would
lend it ; if supplies were needed, France would furnish them ; if arms
were to be purchased, France had arms to sell. During the year 1777
the French partisans of America managed to supply the colonies with
more than twenty thousand muskets and a thousand barrels of powder.
At last the republicans of France, displeased with the double-deal-
ing of their government, began to embark for America. Foremost of all
came the gallant young Marquis of La Fayette.* Though the king
Avithheld permission, though the British minister protested, though family
and home and kindred beckoned the youthful nobleman to return, he left
all to fight the battle of freedom in another land. Fitting a vessel at his
own expense, he eluded the officers, and with the brave De Kalb and a
small company of followers reached GeorgetOAvn, South Carolina, in
* La Favette's name waa Gilbert Matter.
OPERATIONS OF 77. 321
April of 1777. He at once entered the patriot army as a volunteer, aiv)
in the following July was commissioned as a major-general. Not yet
twenty years of age, he clung to Washington as son to father, and through
life their friendship was unclouded.
One of the most important events of the whole war was the cam-
paign of Lieutenant-General Burgoyne. This distinguished British officer
arrived at Quebec in March of 1777. Superseding Sir Guy Carleton i.i
command of the English forces in Canada, he spent the months of April
and May in organizing a powerful army for the invasion of New York.
By the beginning of June he had thoroughly equipped a force of ten thou-
sand men, of whom about seven thousand were British and Hessian vet-
erans; the rest were Canadians and Indians. The plan of the campaign
embraced a descent upon Albany by way of Lake Champlain, Lake
George and the Upper Hudson. From Albany it was Burgoyne's pur-
pose to descend the river to New York and unite his forces with the main
division of the British army. By this means New England was to be cut
oiF from the Middle and Southern colonies and the whole country jjlaced
at the mercy of Howe. That any successful resistance could be offered to
the progress of the invading army was little imagined.
On the 1st of June Burgoyne reached St. John's, at the foot of
Lake Champlain, and on the 16th proceeded to Crown Point. This
place, which was undefended, was occupied by a British garrison ; and
the main army swept on to Ticonderoga, which was at that time held by
three thousand men under General St. Clair. The British soon gained
possession of Mount Defiance, and planted a battery seven hundred feet
above the American works. I\'Iount Hope was also seized and retreat by
way of Lake George cut off. St. Clair, seeing that resistance would be
hopeless, abandoned the fort on the night of the 5th of July, and escaped
with the garrison by way of Mount Independence and Wood Creek, The
British pressed after the fugitives, and overtook them at Hubbardton, a
village in Vermont, seventeen miles from Ticonderoga. A sharp engage-
ment ensued, in which the Americans fought so obstinately as to check the
pursuit ; and then continued their retreat to Fort Edward. On the fol-
lowing day the British reached Whitehall and captured a large quantity
of baggage, stores and provisions.
At this time the American army of the North was commanded by
General Schuyler, a man whose patriotism was greater than his abilities.
His headquarters were at Fort Edward, where he remained until after the
arrival of St. Clair. The garrison now numbered between four and five
thousand men ; but this force was deemed inadequate to hold tlie pipoe
against Burgoyne's army. Schuyler therefore evacuated the post and
2]
322 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
retreated down the Hudson as far as the islands at the mouth of the
Mohawk. Burgoyne came on by way of Fort Ann, which the Americans
had demolished, and thence through the woods over obstructed roads to
Fort Edward, where he arrived on the 30th of July. Fearing that his
supplies would be exhausted before he could reach Albany, the British
general now made a halt, and despatched Colonel Baum with five hundred
men to seize the provincial stores at Bennington, Vermont. Colonel
John Stark rallied the New Hampshire militia, and on the 15th of
August met the British a short distance from the village. On the follow-
ing morning there was a furious battle, in which Baum's force was fairly
annihilated. A battalion of Hessians, led by Breymann, arrived on the
field, only to be utterly routed by the Americans, who were reinforced by
the gallant colonel Warner. The British lost a hundred and forty in
killed and wounded, and nearly seven hundred prisoners. The whole
country was thrilled by the victor}', and the patriots began to rally from
all quarters.
A few days after the battle of Bennington, Burgoyne received in-
telligence of a still greater reverse. At the beginning of the invasion a
large force of Canadians, Tories and Indians, commanded by General St.
Lcger, had been sent by way of Oswego against Fort Schuyler, at the
head of navigation on the Mohawk. This important post was held by a
small garrison under Colonel Gansevoort. On the 3d of August St. Leger
invested the fort, and it seemed that a successful defence was impossible ;
but the brave General Herkimer rallied the militia of the surrounding
country and advanced to the relief of the garrison. When nearing the
fort, the patriots fell into an Indian ambuscade, and a terrible hand-to-
hand conflict ensued in the woods. Herkimer was defeated with a loss
of a hundred and sixty men in killed, wounded and prisoners. The loss
of the savages was almost as great. Hardly had the conflict ended when
the garrison made a sally, carried everything before them, and then fell
back with trophies and prisoners. Already the impetuous and fearless
Arnold had volunteered to lead a detachment from the Hudson for the
relief of the fort. At his approach the savages plundered the Britij^h
camp and fled. St. Leger, dismayed at the treachery of the barbarian^
raised the siege and retreated. Fort Schuyler was saved and strengthened.
Such was the news that was borne to Burgoyne at Fort Edward.
The British general had now lost a month in procuring supplies
from Canada. Should he retreat? Ruin and disgrace were in that
direction. Should he go forward? More than nine thousand patriot
soldiers were in that direction. For General Lincoln had arrived with
the militia of New England ; Washington had sent several detachments
OPERATIONS OF 77.
32a
\w-
SCENE OF BURGOYNE'S
INVASION, 1777.
from the regular army; Morgan had come with his famous riflemen.
Meanwhile, General Gates had sujaerseded Schuyler in command of the
northern army. On the 8th of September the American headquarters
were advanced to Stillwater. At Bemis's Heights,
a short distance north of this place, a strong
camp was laid out and fortified under direction
of the noted Polish engineer Thaddeus Kos-
ciusko. On the 14th of the month, Burgoyne
crossed the Hudson and took post at Saratoga.
Until the 18th he advanced his camp a mile each
day, when the two armies were face to face and
but two miles apart. On the afternoon of the
19th the advance parties of the British attacked
the American wings, and a general battle ensued,
continuing until nightfall. The conflict, though
severe, was indecisive; the Americans retired
within their lines, and the British slept under
arms on the field. To the patriots, whose num-
bers were constantly increasing, the result of the battle was equivalent
to a victory.
The condition of Burgoyne grew more and more critical. On all
sides the lines of Gates were closing around him. His supplies failed ;
his soldiers were put on partial rations ; his Canadian and Indian allies
deserted his standard. But the British general was courageous and
resolute; he strengthened his defences and flattered his men with the
hope that General Clinton, who now commanded the British army in
New York, would make a diversion in their favor. The latter did
ascend the river as far as Forts Clinton and Montgomery. Both these
forts, after an obstinate defence, were carried by assault. Colonel Vaughan
was sent on with a thousand men as far as the town of Kingston, which
was burned ; besides the destruction of stores and private property, nothing
further was accomplished, and the condition of Burgoyne became des-
perate. On the 7th of October he hazarded another battle, in which he
lost his bravest officers and nearly seven hundred privates. The conflict
was terrible, lasting from two o'clock in the afternoon till twilight. At
last Morgan's riflemen singled out the brave General Eraser, who com-
manded the British right, and killed him. His disheartened men turned
and fled from the field. On the American side, Arnold, who had re-
signed his commission, rode at full speed to his old command, and, without
authority, became the inspiring genius of the battle. He charged like a
madman, drove the enemy before him, eluded Gates's aid who was sent to
324 EISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
call him back, burst into the British camp and was severely wounded.
The Americans were completely victorious.
On the night after the battle Burgoyne led his shattered army to
a stronger position. The Americans immediately occupied the abandoned
camp, and then pressed after the fugitives ; for the British were already
retreating. On the 9th of October Burgoyne reached Saratoga and
attempted to escape to Fort Edward. But Gates and Lincoln now com-
manded the river, and the proud Briton was hopelessly hemmed in. He
held out to the last extremity, and finally, when there were only three
days between his soldiers and starvation, was driven to surrender. On
the 17th of October terms of capitulation were agreed on, and the ^^•hole
army, numbering five thousand seven hundred and ninety-one, became
prisoners of war. Among the captives were six members of the British
Parliament. A splendid train of brass artillery consisting of forty-two
^jieces, together with nearly five thousand muskets, and an immense
quantity of ammunition and stores, was the further fruit of the victory.
The valor of the j^atriots had fairly eclipsed the warlike renown of Great
Britain.
As soon as Burgoyne's invasion was at an end, a large portion of
the victorious army of the North was despatched to the aid of Washing-
ton. For, in the mean time, a great campaign had been in progress in
the South ; and the patriots were sorely pressed. At the beginning of
July, Howe had abandoned New Jersey. On the 23d of the same month
he sailed v/ith eighteen thousand men to attack Philadelphia by M^ay of
the Delaware. Washington, suspecting the object of the expedition, broke
up his camp and marched rapidly southward. Off the capes of Virginia
Howe learned that the Americans had obstructed the Delaware, so as to
prevent the passage of his fleet. He therefore determined to enter the
Chesapeake, anchor at the head of the bay and make the attack by land.
As soon as Washington obtained information of the enemy's plans, he
advanced his headquarters from Philadelphia to Wilmington, and there
the American army, numbering between eleven and twelve thousand
men, was concentrated. The forces of Howe were vastly superior in
numbers and equipments, but W^ashington hoped by selecting his ground
and acting on the defensive to beat back the invaders and save the
capital.
On the 25th of August, the British landed at Elk River, in ]\Iary-
land, and nine days afterward began their march toward Philadelphia.
After a council of war and some changes in the arrangement of his forces,
AVasliington selected the left bank of the Brandywine as his line of de-
fence. The l^t A;'ing of the American army Avas stationed at Chad's Ford
OPERATIONS OF 77. 325
to dispute the passage, while the right wing, under General Sullivan, 'vas
extended for three miles up the river. On the 11th of September the
British reached the opposite bank and began battle. What seemed to be
their principal attack was made by the Hessians under Knyphausen at
the ford ; and here Wayne's division held the enemy in check. But the
onset of Knyphausen was only a feint to keep the Americans engaged
until a stronger column of the British, led by Cornwallis and Howe, could
march up the south bank of the Brandywine and cross at a point above
the American right. In this way Sullivan, who was not on the alert,
allowed himself to be outflanked. Washington was misled by false in-
formation ; the right wing, though the men under La Fayette and Stir-
ling fought with great courage, was crushed in by Cornwallis ; and the
day was hopelessly lost.
During the night the defeated patriots retreated to Westchester.
Greene brought up the rear in good order ; through his efforts and those
of the commander-in-chief the army was saved from destruction. The
loss of the Americans in killed, wounded and missing amounted to fully
a thousand men ; that of the British to five hundred and eighty-four. The
gallant La Fayette was severely wounded ; Count Pulaski, a brave Pole
who had espoused the patriot cause, so distinguished himself in this en-
gagement that Congress honored him with the rank of brigadier and gave
him command of the cavalry. On the day after the battle, Washington
continued his retreat to Philadelphia, and then took post at Germantown,
a few miles from the city. Undismayed by his reverse, he resolved to
risk another engagement. Accordingly, on the 15th of the month, he
recrossed the Schuylkill and marched toward the British camp. Twenty
miles below Philadelphia he met Howe at Warren's Tavern. For a
while the two armies manoeuvi'ed, the enemy gaining the better position ;
then a spirited skirmish ensued, and a great battle was imminent. But
just as the conflict was beginning a violent tempest of wind and rain
swept over the field. The combatants were deluged, their cartridges
soaked, and fighting made impossible. On the next day Howe marched
down the Schuylkill ; Washington recrossed the river and confronted his
antagonist. Howe turned suddenly about and hurried up stream along-
the right bank in the direction of Reading. Washington, fearing for his
stores, pressed forward up the left bank to Pottstown. But the move-
ment of the British westward Avas only feigned ; again Howe wheeled,
marched rapidly to the ford above Norristown, crossed the river and
hastened to Philadelphia. On the 26th of September the city was entered
without opposition, and the main division of the British army encamped
at Germantown.
326 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
At the approach of Howe, Congress adjourned to Lancaster. On
the 27th of SejDtember the members met at that place, and again adjourned
to York, \vher2 they assembled on the 30th and continued to hold their
sessions until the British evacuated Philadelphia in the following summer.
Washington now made his camp on Skippack Creek, about twenty miles
from the city. As soon as Howe found himself safe in the " rebel cap-
ital," as he was pleased to call it, he despatched a large division of his
army to capture forts Mifflin and Mercer on the Delaware. Germantown
was thus considerably weakened, and Washington resolved to attempt a
a surprise. The same plan of attack which had been so successful at
Trenton was again adopted. On the night of the 3d of October the
American army, arranged in several divisions, marched silently toward
Germantown. The roads were rough, and the different columns reached
the British outposts at irregular intervals. The morning was foggy, and
tliG movements of both armies were unsteady and confused. There was
much severe jfighting, and at one time it seemed that the British would be
overwhelmed ; but they gained possession of a large stone house and
held it. A foolish attempt to dislodge them gave the enemy time to
rally. Some strong columns of Americans were kept out of the battle
by the inefficiency of their commanders ; the tide turned against the
patriots, and the day was lost. Of the Americans a liundred and fifty-
two Avere killed, five hundred and twenty-one wounded, and about four
liundred missing. Howe reported the British loss at five hundred and
thirty -five. The retreat of the Americans was covered by Greene and
Pulaski.
On the 22d of October Fort Mercer, on the New Jersey side of
the Delaware, seven miles below Philadelphia, was assaulted by twelve
hundred Hessians under Count Donop. The garrison, though number-
ing but four hundred, made a brave and successful resistance. Tiie
assault was like that at Bunker Hill. Count Donop received a mortal
wound, and nearly four hundred of his men fell before the American
entrenchments. At the same time the British fleet, assisted by a laud-
force from Philadelphia, attacked Fort Mifflin on Mud Island, in the
Delaware. Here also the assailants met with an obstinate resistance.
The assault became a siege, which lasted till the 15th of November. The
2)atriots held out against superior numbers until every gun was dismounted
and every palisade demolished. Then at niid night the ruined fortress
was set on fire, and the garrison escaped to Fort Mercer. To make a
second attack on this place Howe despatched two thousand men under
CornAvallis. Washington sent General Greene to succor the fortress ; but
Coru\>'allis was strongly reinforced, and the American general would not
OPERATIONS OF 77.
327
hazard a battle. On the 20th of November Fort Mercer was abandoned
to the British ; and thus General Howe obtained undisputed control of
the Delaware.
After the battle of Germantown Washington took up his head-
quarters at Whitemarsh, twelve miles from Philadelphia. Winter Avas
approaching, and the patriots began to suffer for food and clothing.
Howe, knowing the distressed condition of the Americans, determined to
surprise their camp. On the evening of the 2d of December he held a
council of war, and it was decided to march against Washington on the
following night. But Lydia Darrah, at whose house the council was
held, overheard the plan of the enemies of her country. On the follow-
ing morning she obtained a passport from Lord Howe, left the city on
pretence of going to mill, rode rapidly to the American lines, and sent
information of the impending attack to Washington. When, on the
morning of the 4th, the British approached Whitemarsh they found the
cannon mounted and the patriots standing in order of battle. The British
general manoeuvred for four days, and then marched back to Philadel-
phia. During the remainder of the winter the city was occupied by
nearly twenty thousand English and Hessian soldiers. There they
reveled and rioted. Everything that the magazines of Great Britain
could furnish was lavished upon the army of invaders who lay warmly
housed in the city of Penn. In the patriot camp there was a different
scene.
On the 11th of December Washington left his position at White-
marsh and went into winter-quarters at Valley Forge on the right bank
of the Schuylkill. The march thither occupied four days. Thousands
of the soldiei-s were without shoes, and
the frozen ground was marked with bloody
footprints. The sagacity of Washington
had pointed to a strong position for his
encampment. To the security of the
river and hills the additional security of
redoubts and entrenchments was added.
Log cabins were built for the soldiers, and
everything was done that could be done
to secure the comfort of the suffering pat-
riots. But it was a long and dreary winter ; moaning and anguish were
heard in the camp, and the echo fell hea\'y on the soul of the commander.
These were the darkest days of Washington's life. Congress in a mea-
sure abandoned him, the people withheld their sympathies. The brilliant
success of the army of the North was unjustly compared with the reverses
ENCAMPMENT AT VALLEY FOICGE,
1777-8.
828 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the army of the South. Many men high in military and civil station
left the great leader unsupported in the hour of his grief; even Samuel
Adams, impatient under calamity, withdrew his confidence. There was
a miserable conspiracy headed by Gates, Conway and Mifflin. Washing-
ton was to be superseded, and Gates or Lee was to be made commander-
in-chief. But the alienation was only for a moment ; the allegiance of
the army remained unshaken, and the nation's confidence in the troubled
chieftain became stronger than ever. Still, at the close of 1777, the
patriot cause was obscured with clouds and misfortune.
CHAPTER XLI.
FRANCE TO THE RESCUE.
TjlOUR months before the declaration of independence, Silas Deane of
-"- Connecticut was appointed commissioner to France. His business
at the French court was to act as the political and commercial agent of
the United Colonies. His first service was to make a secret arrangement
with Beaumarchais, a rich French merchant, by which the latter was to
supply the Americans with the materials necessary for carrying on the war.
The king of France and his prime minister, Vergennes, winked at this
proceeding ; but the agents of Great Britain were jealous and suspicious,
and it wiis not until the autumn of 1777 that a ship laden with two hun-
dred thousand dollars' worth of arms, ammunition and specie could be
sent to America. In that ship came Baron Steuben, a veteran soldier and
disciplinarian from the army of Frederic the Great. Arriving at Ports-
mouth, the baron tarried a short time in New England, and then repaired
to York, where Congress was in session. From that body he received a
commission, and at once joined AVashington at Valley Forge. His acces-
sion to the American army was an event of great importance. He re-
ceived the appointment of inspector-general ; and from the day in which
he entered upon the discharge of his duties there was a marked improve-
ment in the condition and discipline of the soldiers. The American reg-
ulars were never again beaten when confronted by the British in equal
numbers.
In November of 1776 Arthur Lee and Benjamin Franklin were
appointed by Congress to negotiate an open treaty of friendship and com-
FRANCE TO THE RESCUE. 329
merce with the French king. In the following month they reached Paris
and began their conferences with Vergennes. For a long time King
Louis and his minister were wary of the proposed alliance. They cor-
dially hated Great Britain, they rejoiced that the British empire was about
to be dismembered, they gave secret encouragement to the colonies to hold
out in their rebellion, they loaned money and shipped arms to America ;
but an open alliance was equivalent to a war with England, and that the
French court dreaded.
Now it was that the genius of Dr. Franklin shone with a peculiar
kistre. At the gay court of Louis XVI. he stood as the representative
of his country. No nation ever had an ambassador of greater wisdom
and sagacity. His reputation for learning had preceded him ; the dignity
of his demeanor and the simplicity of his manners added to his fame.
Whether as philosopher or diplomatist, no man in that great city of fashion
was the equal of the venerable American patriot. His wit and genial
humor made him admired ; his talents and courtesy commanded respect ;
his patience and perseverance gave him final success. During the whole
of 1777 he remained at Paris and Versailles, availing himself of every
opportunity to promote the interests of his country. At last came the
news of Burgoyne's surrender. A powerful British army had been sub-
dued by the colonists without aid from abroad. The success of the Amer-
ican arms and the prospect of commercial advantage decided the wavering
policy of the king, and in the beginning of winter he made an announce-
ment of his determination to accept an alliance with the colonies. On the
6th of February, 1778, a treaty was concluded ; France acknowledged the
independence of the United States and entered into relations of reciprocal
friendship with the new nation. It was further stipulated that in case
England should declare war against France, the Americans and the
French should make common cause, and that neither should subscribe to
a treaty of peace without the concurrence of the other. In America the
news of the new alliance was received with great rejoicing ; in England,
with vindictive anger.
Benjamin Franklin, the author of the first treaty between the
United States and a foreign nation, was born in Boston on the 17th of
January, 1706. His father was a manufacturer of soap and candles.
To this humble vocation the young Benjahiin was devoted by his parents;
but the walls of a candle-shop were too narrow for his aspiring genius.
At the age of twelve he was apprenticed to his brother to learn the art of
printing ; but the brother beat him, and he ran off to New York. There
he found no employment. In 1723 he repaired to Philadelphia, entered
a nrintinp'-office, and rose to distinction. He visited Enorlnnd ; returned;
330
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
founded the first circulating librarj^ in America ; became a man of science;
edited Poor Richard's Almanac ; originated the American Philosophical
Society ; discovered the
identity of electricity
and lightning; made
himself known in both
hemispheres; espoused
the cause of the pat-
riots ; and devoted the
unimpaired energies of
his old age to per-
fecting; the American
Union. The name of
Franklin is one of the
brightest in the history
of any nation.
In May of 1778
Congress ratified the
treaty Avith France. A
month before this time
a French fleet, com-
manded by Count
d'Estaing, had been
despatched to Amer-
ica. The object was
BKNJAIIIN FRANKLIN.
to sail into the Del-
aware and blockade the British squadron at Philadelphia. Both France
and Great Britain understood full well that war was inevitable, and each
immediately prepared for the conflict. George III. now became willing
to treat with his American subjects. Lord North, the prime minister,
brought forward two bills in Avhich everything that the colonists had
claimed was conceded. The bills were passed by Parliament, and the
king assented. Commissioners were sent to America ; but Congress in-
formed them that nothing but an express acknowledgment of the inde-
pendence of the United States Avould now be accepted. Then the com-
missioners tried bribery and intrigue ; and Congress would hold no further
conference with them.
From September of 1777 until the following June the British army
remained at Philadel])hia. The fleet of Admiral HoAve lay in the Del-
aware. In the spring of 1778, General Howe w^as superseded by Sir
Henj;}' Clinton. When the rumor came that the fleet of D'Estaing was
FRANCE TO THE RESCUE. 331
approaching, the English admiral withdrew from the Delaware and sailed
for New York. Finally, on the 18tli of June, the British army evacuated
Philadelphia and retreated across New Jersey. Washington occupied the
city, crossed the river, and followed the retreating foe. At JNIonmouth,
eighteen miles south-east of New Brunswick, the British were overtaken.
On the morning of the 28th General Lee was ordered to attack the enemy.
The first onset was made by the American cavalry under La Fayette ;
but they were driven back by Cornwallis and Clinton. Lee, who had
opposed the battle, and was not anxious for victory, ordered his line to
fall back to a stronger position ; but the troops mistook the order and
began a retreat, the British charging after them. Washington met the
fugitives, rallied them, administered a severe rebuke to Lee, and ordered
him to the rear. During the rest of the engagement the haughty officer,
half treacherous in his principles and practices, remained at a distance,
making satirical remarks about the battle. The fight continued till night-
fall ; the advantage was with the Americans ; and Washington, in hope
of a complete victory, anxiously waited for the morning. During the
night, however, Clinton succeeded in withdrawing his forces from the
field, and thus escaped the peril of defeat.
The loss of the Americans in the battle of Monmouth was sixty-
seven killed and a hundred and sixty wounded. The British left nearly
three hundred dead on the field. On the day after the battle Washington
received an insulting letter from Lee demanding an apology for the lan-
guage which the commander-in-chief had used. Washington replied that
the language was warranted by the circumstances. This Lee answered
in a still more offensive manner, and was thereupon arrested, tried by a
court-martial, and dismissed from his command for twelve months. The
brave, rash man never re-entered the service, and did not live to see his
country's independence.
The British land and naval forces were now concentrated at New
York. Washington followed, crossed the Hudson, and took up his head-
quarters at White Plains. On the llth of July Count d'Estaing's fleet
arrived off Sandy Hook and attempted to attack the British squadron in
the bay ; but the bar at the entrance prevented the passage of the French
vessels. D'Estaing next sailed for Newport, Rhode Island, where the
British, commanded by General Pigot, were in strong force. At the same
time a division of the American army, led by General Sullivan, proceeded
to Providence to co-operate with the French fleet in the attack on New-
port. Greene and La Fayette came with reinforcement, and the whole
army took post at Tiverton. On the 9th of August Sullivan succeeded
in crossing the eastern passage of the bay, and secured a favorable pocition
332 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
on the island. A joint attack by land and sea was planned for the fol-
lowing day. On that morning, however, the fleet of Lord Howe, who
had left New York in pursuit of the French, came in sight ; and D'Estaing,
instead -^f beginning the bombardment of Newport, sailed out to give
battle to Howe. Just as the two squadrons were about to begin an en-
<'-agement a violent storm arose by which the fleets were parted and
greatly damaged. D'Estaing repaired to Boston, and Howe returned to
New York.
Sullivan laid siege to Newport; but when the French squadron
sailed away, he found it necessary to retreat. The British pursued the
Americans, and overtook them in the northern part of the island ; a battle
ensued, and Pigot was repulsed with a loss of two hundred and sixty
men. On the following night Sullivan succeeded in reaching the main-
land ; and it was well that he did so ; for on the next day General Clin-
ton arrived at Newport with a division of four thousand regulars. The
Americans saved themselves by hastily retiring from the neighborhood.
Clinton, having sent out a detachment under Colonel Grey to burn the
American shipping in Buzzard's Bay, destroy the stores in New Bedford
and ravage Martha's Vineyard, returned to New York.
The command of the British naval forces in America was now
transferred from Lord Howe to Admiral Byron. Sir Henry Clinton,
unable to accomplish anything in honorable warfare, descended to maraud-
ing and robbery. Early in October a band of incendiaries, led by Fer-
guson, burned the American ships at Little Egg Harbor. For several
miles inland the country was devastated, houses pillaged, barns burned,
patriots murdered. To the preceding July belongs the sad story of the
Wyoming massacre. Major Jolm Butler, a tory of Niagara, raised a
company of sixteen hundred loyalists, Canadians and Indians, and marched
into the valley of Wyoming, county of Luzerne, Pennsylvania. The
settlement Avas defenceless. The fathers and brothers were away in the
patriot army. There were some feeble forts on the Susquehanna in the
neighborhood of Wilkesbarre, but they were useless without defenders.
On the approach of the tories and savages the few militia remaining in
the valley, together with the old men and boys, rallied for the defence of
their homes. A battle was fought, and the poor patriots were utterly
routed. The fugitives fled to the principal fort, which was crowded
with M-omen and children. On came the murderous horde, and demanded
a surrender. Honorable terms were promised by Butler, and the garrL^on
capitulated. On the 5th of July the gates were opened, and the bar-
barians entered. Immediately they began to plunder, then to burn, and
then to use the hatchet and the scalping-knife. Tliere is no authentic
FRANCE TO THE RESCUE. 833
record of the horrible atrocities that followed. The savages divided
into parties, scattered through the valley, plundered, robbed, burned, and
drove almost every surviving family into the swamps or mountains. In
this way George III. would subdue the American colonies.
November witnessed a similar massacre at the village of Cherry
Valley, Otsego county. New York. This time the invaders were led by
Joseph Brant, the Mohawk sachem, and Walter Butler, a son of J\Iajor
John Butler. The people of Cherry Valley were driven from their
homes ; every house in the village was burned ; women and children were
tomahawked and scalped ; and forty miserable sufferers dragged into cap-
tivity. To avenge these outrages an expedition was sent against the
savages on the Upper Susquehanna ; and they in turn were made to feel
the terrors of war. In the preceding December the famous Major Clarke
had received from Patrick Henry, then governor of Virginia, a commis-
sion to proceed against the Indians west of the Alleghanies. The expe-
dition left Pittsburg in the spring of 1778 ; descended to the mouth of the
Ohio ; and on the 4th of the following July captured Kaskaskia. Other
important posts were taken ; and in August Vincennes was forced to
capitulate.
On the 3d of November Count d'Estaing's fleet sailed from Boston
for the West Indies. In December Admiral Byron, in command of the
British squadron, left New York to try the fortunes of war on the ocean.
A few days previously, Colonel Campbell, with a force of two thousand
men, was sent by General Clinton for the conquest of Georgia. On the
29th of December the expedition reached Savannah. The place was de-
fended by General Hobert Howe with a regiment of five hundred and
fifty regulars, and three hundred militia. Notwithstanding the superior
numbers of the British, Howe determined to risk a battle ; but the result
was disastrous. The Americans were routed and driven out of the city.
Escaping up the river, the defeated patriots crossed into South Carolina
and found refuge at Charleston. Such was the only real conquest made
by the Britisli during the year 1778. It was now nearly four years since
the battle of Concord, and Great Britain had lost vastly more than she
had gained in her struggle with the colonies. The city of New York was
held by Clinton ; Newport was garrisoned by a division under Pigot ; the
feeble capital of Georgia was conquered ; all the rest remained to the
patriots.
834 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XLII.
MOVEMENTS OF '79.
THE winter of 1778-79 was passed by the American arniy at Middle-
brook, New Jersey. With the opening of spring there was much
discouragement among the soldiers ; for they were neither paid nor fed.
Only the personal influence of Washington and the patriotism of the
camp prevented a mutiny. Clinton opened the campaign with a number
of predatory incursions into the surrounding country. In February,
Tryon, the old tory governor of New York, a man so savage in his nature
that the Indians called him the Big Wolf, marched from Kingsbridge
with a body of fifteen hundred regulars and tories to destroy the salt-
works at Horse Neck, Connecticut. General Putnam, who chanced to
be in that neighborhood, rallied the militia and made a brave defence.
The Americans planted some cannon on the brow of a hill and fought
with much spirit until they were outflanked by the British and obliged to
fly. It was here that General Putnam, pursued and about to be over-
taken by a party of dragoons, turned out of the road, spurred his horse
down a precipice and escaped.* Tryon destroyed the salt-works, plun-
dered and burned the village of West Greenwich and returned to Kings-
bridge.
In the latter part of May Clinton himself sailed Avith an armament
up the Hudson to Stony Point. This strong position, commanding the
river, had been chosen by Washington as the site of a fort ; the Amer-
icans were engaged upon the unfinished works when Clinton's squadron
came in sight. The feeble garrison, unable to resist the overwhelming
numbers of the enemy, escaped from the fortifications. On the 1st of
June the British entered, mounted cannon and began to bombard Ver-
planck's Point, on the other side of the river. Here the patriots made a
brave resistance ; but the British landed a strong force, surrounded the
fort and compelled a surrender. Both Verplanck's and Stony Point were
strongly fortified and garrisoned by the enemy. About the same time
Virginia suffered from an incursion of the tories. A vast amount of
public and private property was destroyed ; and several towns, including
Norfolk and Portsmouth, were laid in ashes.
* After all, Putnam's exploit was not so marvelous. In 1825 some of General La
Fayette's dragoons rode down the same hill for sport.
MOVEMENTS OF 79. 335
In July the ferocious Tryon again distinguished himself. With a
force of twenty-six hundred Hessians and tories he sailed to New Haven,
captured the city and would have burned it but for fear of the gathering
militia. Having set East Haven on fire, the destroyers sailed down the
Sound to the beautiful town of Fairfield, which was given to the flames.
At Norwalk, while the village was burning and the terrified people flying
from their homes, Tryon, on a neighboring hill, sat in a rocking-chair
and laughed heartily at the scene. It was not long until these dastardly
outrages were made to appear more dastardly by contrast with a heroic
exploit of the patriots.
Early in July General Wayne received orders to attempt the recap-
ture of Stony Point. On the 15th of the month he mustered a force of
light infantry at a convenient point on the Hudson and marched against
the seemingly impregnable fortress. The movement was not discovered
by the enemy. At eight o'clock in the evening Wayne halted a mile
from the fort and gave orders for the assault. A negro who had learned
the countersign went with the advance ; the British pickets were deceived,
caught and gagged. The Americans advanced in tM'O columns, the first
led by Wayne, and the second by the gallant Frenchman, Colonel De
Fleury. Everything was done in silence. Muskets were unloaded and
bayonets fixed ; not a gun was to be fired. Tlie two divisions, attacking
from opposite sides, were to meet in the middle of the fort. The assault
was made a little after midnight. Within pistol-shot of the sentinels on
the height, the Americans were discovered. There was the cry, To arms!
the rattle of drums, and then the roar of musketry and cannon. The
patriots never wavered. The ramparts were scaled ; and the British, find-
ing themselves between two closing lines of bayonets, cried out for quar-
ter. Sixty-three of the enemy fell in the struggle ; the remaining five
hundred and forty-three were made prisoners. Of the Americans only
fifteen were killed and eighty-three wounded. In the days that followed
the assault Wayne secured the ordnance and stores, valued at more than
a hundred and fifty thousand dollars, then destroyed the fort and marched
away. On the 20th a division of the British army, arriving at Stony
Point, found nothing but a desolated hill. In honor of his brave deed
General Wayne received a gold medal from Congress.
Three days after the taking of Stony Point, Major Lee with a com-
pany of militia attacked the British garrison at Jersey City. Again the
assault was successful, the enemy losing nearly two hundred men. On
the 25th of the same month a fleet of thirty-seven vessels, which had
been equipped by Massachusetts, was sent against a British post recently
established at the mouth of the Penobscot. The enterprise, however, was
336 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
managed with little skill and less success. On the 13th of August, while
the American ships were still besieging the post, they were suddenly
attacked and destroyed by a British fleet. In the summer of this year
an army of four thousand six hundred men, commanded by Generals Sul-
livan and James Clinton, was sent against the Indians of the Upper Sus-
quehanna. The atrocities of Wyoming were now fully avenged, and the
savages driven to destruction. At Elmira, on the Tioga River, the In-
dians and tories had fortified themselves ; but on the 29th of August they
were forced from their stronghold and utterly routed. The whole coun-
try between the Susquehanna and the Genesee was wasted by the patriots,
who, in the course of the campaign, destroyed forty Indian villages. In
the latter jjart of October Sir Henry Clinton, alarmed by the rumored
approach of the French fleet, withdrew the British forces from Rhode
Island. The retirement from Newport was made with so much haste that
the heavy guns and large quantities of stores were left behind. Such
were the leading military movements in the North.
Meanwhile, the war had continued in Georgia and South Carolina ;
and the patriots had met with many reverses. At the beginning of the
year Fort Sunbury, on St. Catherine's Sound, was the only post held by
the Americans south of the Savannah. On the 9th of January this ibrt
was captured by a body of British troops from Florida, led by General
Provost. This officer then joined his forces with those of Colonel Camp-
bell, M'ho had just effected the conquest of Savannah, and assumed com-
mand of the British army in the South. A force of two thousand reg-
ulars and loyalists, commanded by Campbell, was at once despatched
against Augusta ; for there the republican legislature had assembled after
the fall of Savannah. On the 29th of January the British reached their
destination, and Augusta fell a prey to the invaders. For a while the
whole of Georgia was prostrated before the king's soldiery.
In the mean time, the tories of Western Carolina had risen in arms
and were advancing to join the forces of Campbell at Augusta. While
marching thither they were attacked and defeated in a canebrake by
the patriots under Captain Anderson. On the 14th of February the tories
were again overtaken in the countr)' west of Broad River. Colonel
Pickens, at the head of the Carolina militia, fell upon them with such
fury that the whole force was annihilated. Colonel Boyd, the tory leader,
and seventy of his men were killed. Seventy-five others were captured,
tried for treason and condemned to death ; but only five of the ringleader
were hanged. On receiving intelligence of what had happened, Campbell
hastily evacuated Augusta and retreated toward Savannah. The western
half of Georgia was recovered more quickly than it had been lost.
MOVEMENTS OF 79. 337
While the British were retreating down the river, General Lincoln,
who now commanded the American forces in the South, sent General
Ashe with a division of two thousand men to intercept the enemy. On
the 25th of February the Americans crossed the Savannah and pursued
Campbell as far as Brier Creek, forty-five miles below Augusta. The
bridge over this stream had been destroyed by the retreating British, anc]
the patriots came to a halt. While they were delayed General Prevosr
marched with a strong force from Savannah, crossed Brier Creek above
the American position, and completely surrounded General Ashe's com-
mand. A battle was fought on the 3d of March ; the Americans, after
losing more than three hundred men in killed, wounded and prisoners,
were totally routed and driven into the swamps and river. The rem-
nants of Ashe's army rejoined General Lincoln at Perrysburg. The shock
of this defeat again prostrated Georgia, and a royal government was
established over the State.
But the Carolinians rallied with great vigor. AVithin a month Gen-
eral Lincoln was again in the field with a force of more than five thou-
sand men. Still hoping to reconquer Georgia, he advanced up the left
bank of the river in the direction of Augusta ; but at the same time Gen-
eral Prevost crossed the Savannah and marched against Charleston. On
the 12th of May he summoned the city to surrender, but General Moultrie,
who commanded the patriots, was in no humor to do it. Prevost made
preparations for a siege ; but learning that General Lincoln had turned
back to attack him, he made a hasty retreat. The Americans pursued,
overtook the enemy at Stono Ferry, ten miles west of Charleston, made
an imprudent attack and were repulsed with considerable loss. Before
retiring from the State, Prevost succeeded in establishing a post at Beau-
fort, and then fell back to Savannah. From June until September
military operations were almost wholly suspended.
And now came Count d'Estaing with his fleet from the West Indies
to Carolina to co-operate with General Lincoln in the reduction of
Savannah. Prevost was alarmed, and concentrated his forces for the
defence of the city. The storm-winds of the equinox were approaching,
and D'Estaing stipulated with the Americans that his fleet should not be
long detained on that coast devoid of harbors. On the 12th of September
the French, numbering six thousand, effected a landing, and advanced to
the siege. Eleven days elapsed before the slow-moving General Lincoln
arrived with his forces. Meanwhile, on the 16th of the month, D'Estaing
had demanded a surrender ; but Prevost, who asked a day for consulta-
tion and used it in strengthening his works and in receiving reinforce-
ments from Beaufort, answered with a message ofv defiance. After Lin-
22
338 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
coin's arrival the siege was prosecuted with great vigor. The city was
bombarded wellnigh to destruction; the people were driven into the
cellars, and dared not venture forth on peril of their lives. But the
British defences remained unshaken. At last the impatient D'Estaing
notified Lincoln that the city must be stormed or the siege abandoned.
The former course was preferred. On the 8th of October a conference
was held, and it was determined to make the assault at daylight on the
following morning.
Accordingly, an hour before sunrise the allies advanced against the
redoubts of the British. The attack was made irregularly, but with great
vehemence; the defence, with desperate determination. The struggle
around the ramparts was brief but furious. At one time it seemed that
the works would be carried. The French and the patriots mounted the
parapet and planted the flags of Carolina and France. But the emblems
of victory, with those who bore them, were hurled into the dust. Here
the brave Sergeant Jasper, the hero of Fort Moultrie, fell to rise no more.
After an hour of the most gallant fighting, the allied columns were shat-
tered and driven back with fearful losses. D'Estaing was twice wounded.
The noble Pulaski was struck with a grape-shot and borne dying from the
field. The repulse was complete, humiliating, disastrous. D'Estaing re-
tired with his men on board the fleet and sailed for France. Lincoln
with the remnants of his army retreated to Charleston.
While the siege of Savannah was progressing, the American arms
were made famous on the ocean. On the 23d of September Paul Jones,
cruisino; off the coast of Scotland with a flotilla of French and American
vessels, fell in with a fleet of British merchantmen, convoyed by two
men-of-war. The battle that ensued was bloody beyond precedent in
naval warfare. For an hour and a half the Serapis, a British frigate of
forty-four guns, engaged the Poor Richard^ within musket-shot. Then
the vessels, both in a sinking condition, were run alongside and lashed
together. The marines fought with the fury of madmen until the Serapis
struck her colors. Jones hastily transferred his men to the conquered
ship, and the Poor Richard went down. The remaining British vessel
was also attacked and captured. So desperate was the engagement that of
the three hundred and seventy-five men on board the fleet of Jones three
hundred were either killed or wounded.
So closed the year 1779. The colonies were not yet free. The
French alliance, which had promised so much, had brought but little
benefit. The credit of Congress had sunk almost to nothing ; the national
treasury was bankrupt. The patriots of the army were poorly fed, and
* So nam(>d in honor of Dr. Franklin's almanac.
REVERSES AND TREASON. 339
paid only with unkept promises. The disposition of Great Britain was
best ilhistrated in the measures adopted by Parliament for the campaigns
of the ensuing year. The levies made by the House of Commons were
eighty-five thousand marines and thirty-five thousand additional troops ;
while the extraordinary expenses of the War Department were set at
twenty million pounds sterling.
CHAPTER XLIII.
REVERSES AND TREASON
DURING the year 1780 military operations at the North were, for the
most part, suspended. Twice did the British under Knyphausen
advance from New York into New Jersey ; and twice they were driven
back. Early in July Admiral De Ternay arrived at Newport with a
French squadron and six thousand land-troops under Count Rocham-
beau. The Americans were greatly elated at the coming of their allies ;
but Washington's army was in so destitute a condition that active co-
operation was impracticable. In September the commander-in-chief held
a conference with Rochambeau, and the plans of future campaigns were in
part determined.
In the South there was much activity, and the patriots suffered many
reverses. South Carolina was completely overrun with the invading
armies. On the 11th of February Admiral Arbuthnot, in command of a
British squadron, anchored before Charleston. Sir Henry Clinton and a
division of five thousand men from the army in New York were on board
the fleet. The plan of the campaign was to subjugate the whole South,
beginning with Charleston. The city was defended by fourteen hundred
men, under General Lincoln, who began his preparations by fortifying
the neck of the peninsula. The British effected a landing a few miles
below the harbor, advanced up the right bank of Ashley River, and
crossed to the north of the city. A month was spent by Clinton in mak-
ing cautious approaches toward the American entrenchments. On the
7th of April General Lincoln was reinforced by seven hundred veterans
from Virginia. Two days afterward Admiral Arbuthnot, favored by the
wind and tide, succeeded in passing Fort Moultrie with his fleet, and
anchored within cannon-shot of the city. A summons to surrender was
340 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
'answered by Lincoln with the assurance that Charleston would be
defended to the last extremity.
A siege was at once begun, and prosecuted with great vigor. Desir-
ing to keep a way open for retreat, Lincoln sent a body of three hundred
men under General Huger to scour the country
north of Cooper E-iver and rally the militia.
Apprised of this movement, Tarleton with a
legion of British cavalry stole upon Huger's
forces at Monk's Corner, thirty miles north of
Charleston, routed and dispersed the whole com-
pany. The city was now fairly hemmed in, and
the thunder of two hundred cannon shook the
beleaguered ramparts. From the beginning the
SIEGE OF CHARLESTON, 1780. dcfeucc liad bceu hopeless, and every day the
condition of the town became more desperate.
Finally the fortifications were beaten down, and Clinton made ready to
storm the American works ; not till then did Lincoln and the civil
authorities, dreading the havoc of an assault, agree to capitulate. On the
12th of May the principal city of the South was given uj) to the British
and the men who had so bravely defended it became prisoners of war.
A few days before the surrender Tarleton, who was ranging the
country to the north and west, surprised and dispersed a body of militia
v.ho had gathered on the Santee. After the capture of the city, three
expeditions were directed into different sections of the State. The Amer-
ican post at Ninety-Six, a hundred and fifty miles north-Avest of the caj)-
ital, was seized. A second detachment of the British invaded the country
bordering on the Savannah. Cornwallis with the principal division
marched to the north-east, crossed the Santee and captured Georgetown,
near the mouth of the Great Pedee. Here he learned that Colonel Buford,
with a body of five hundred patriots, wdio had left North Carolina for
the relief of Charleston, was now retreating through the district north of
Camden. Tarleton with seven hundred cavalry pressed rapidly across
the country, overtook the Americans on the AVaxhaw, a tributary of the
Catawba, surprised them, and, while negotiations for a surrender Avere
pending, charged upon and massacred nearly the vi'hole company. For
this atrocious deed Cornwallis commended Tarleton to the sj)ecial favor
of the Britisli Parliament.
By such means the authority of Great Britain was re-established
over South Carolina. As soon as the work Avas done, Clinton and
Arbuthnot, Avith about half of the British army, sailed for Ncav York.
ConiAA'allis was left Avitli the remainder to hold the conquered territory ;
REVERSES AND TREASON. 341 I
for it was the territory, and not the people, who were conquered. In this -^
condition of affairs, two daring patriot leaders arose to rescue the repub- ,\
lican cause. These men, ever afterward famous, were Thomas Sumter >
and Francis Marion. Under their leadership the militia in the central )
and western portions of the State, especially on the upper tributaries of
Broad River, were rallied, armed and mounted. An audacious partisan
warfare was begun, and exposed detachments of the British army were
swept off as though an enemy had fallen on them from the skies. At
Eocky Mount, on the Wateree, Colonel Sumter burst upon a party of
dragoons, who barely saved themselves. On the 6th of August he attacked
a large detachment of regulars and tories at Hanging Rock, in Lancaster
county, defeated them and retreated. It was in this battle that young
Andrew Jackson began his career as a soldier.
The exploits of Sumter were even surpassed by those of Marion.
His company consisted at first of twenty men and boys, white and black,
half clad and poorly armed. But the number constantly increased, and
the "Ragged Regiment" soon became a terror to the enemy. Every
British outpost was in peril. There was no telling when or where the
sword of the fearless leader would fall. From the swamps at midnight he
and his men would suddenly dart upon the encampments of the enemy,
sweeping everything before them. When the British expected Marion
in front, he would assail the rearguard with the utmost fury, and then dis-
appear ; when they thought him hovering on their flank, he was a hun-
dred miles away. During the whole summer and autumn of 1780 he
swept around Cornwallis's positions, cutting his lines of communication
and making incessant onsets with an audacity as destructive as it was pro-
voking. In the midst of this wild and lawless warfare, Marion preserved
an unblemished reputation. Fifteen years afterward, when he lay on his
deathbed, he declared that he had never intentionally wronged any man ;
and it was truthfully written on his monument that he lived without fear
and died without reproach.
After the fall of Charleston, General Gates was appointed to com-
mand in the South. With a strong force of regulars and such militia as
would join his standard, he advanced across North Carolina, and at the
beginning of August reached the southern boundary of the State. Lord
Rawdon, who commanded the British posts in the northern parts of South
Carolina, called in his detachments and concentrated his forces at Camden.
Hither came also Cornwallis with reinforcements from Charleston and
Georgetown. The Americans moved forward and took post at Clermont,
thirteen miles north-west from Camden. By a singular coincidence Corn-
wallis and Gates each formed the design of surprising his antagonist in
342
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the night. Accordingly, on the evening of the 15th of August, Gates set
out for Camden, and at the same time Cornwallis moved toward Cler-
mont. About daydawn the two armies met midway on Sander^s Creek.
Both generals were surprised,
but both made immediate
preparations for battle. As
soon as it was light the con-
flict began. Steadiness and
courage in all parts of the
field would have given the
victory to the Americans, but
at the first onset the Virginia
and Carolina militia broke
line, threw their arms away
and fled. For a while the
Continentals of Maryland
and Delaware sustained the
battle with great bravery, but
at length they were outflank-
ed by Webster's cavalry and
driven back. The American
SCENE OF OPEKATIONS IN THE SOUTH, 1780, 81.
officers made heroic efforts to
save the day, but all in vain ; the retreat became a rout. Baron de Kalb,
the friend of La Fayette and fellow-sufierer with Washington at Valley
Forge, remained on the field trying to rally his men until he was wounded
eleven times and fell in the agony of death. More than a thousand of the
Americans were killed, wounded or captured. The shattered remnants
continued the retreat to Charlotte, North Carolina^ eighty miles distant.
The military reputation of Gates, which never had any solid foundation,
was blown away like chafF, and he was superseded by General Greene,
who, after Washington, was the best officer of the Revolution.
Cornwallis was again master of South Carolina. A few days after
the battle of Sander's Creek, Sumter's corps was overtaken by Tarleton
at Fishing Creek, thirty miles north-west from Camden, and completely
routed. Only Marion and his troopers remained to harass the victorious
enemy. The triumph of the British was marked by cruelty and oppres-
sion. Cornwallis visited the patriots with merciless severity, and the
ruined State crouched at the feet of the conqueror. On the 8 th of Sep-
tember the British advanced from Camden into North Carolina, and on
the 25th reached Charlotte, the Americans having retreated to Salisbury.
While this movement was in progress. Colonel Ferguson, with a force of
REVERSES AND TREASON 343
eleven hundred regulars and tories, was sent into the country west of the
Catawba to overawe the patriots and encourage the loyalists to take up
arms. On the 7th of October, while Ferguson and his men were en-
camped on the top of King's Mountain, they were suddenly attacked by
a thousand riflemen led by Colonel Campbell. The camp was surrounded ■
a desperate battle of an hour and a half ensued ; Ferguson was slain, and
three hundred of his men were killed or wounded ; the remaining eight
hundred threw down their arms and begged for quarter. On the morn-
ing after the battle ten of the leading tory prisoners were condemned by a
court-martial and hanged. During the remaining two months of the year
there were no military movements of importance. Georgia and South
Carolina were in ihe power of the British, and North Carolina was invaded.
Meanwhile, the financial credit of the nation was sinking to the
lowest ebb. Congress, having no silver and gold with which to meet the
accumulating expenses of the war, had resorted to paper money. At first
the expedient was successful, and the continental bills were received at
par; but as one issue followed another, the value of the notes rapidly
diminished, until, by the middle of 1780, they were not worth two cents
to the dollar. To aggravate the evil, the emissaries of Great Britain
executed counterfeits of the congressional money and sowed the spurious
bills broadcast over the land. Business was paralyzed for the want of a
currency, and the distress became extreme ; but Robert Morris and a few
other wealthy patriots came forward with their private fortunes and saved
the suffering colonies from ruin. The mothers of America also lent a
helping hand ; and the patriot camp was gladdened with many a contribu-
tion of food and clothing which woman's sacrificing care had provided.
In the midst of the general gloom the country was shocked by the
rumor that Benedict Arnold had turned traitor. And the news, though
hardly credible, was true. The brave, rash man, who, on behalf of the
patriot cause, had suffered untold hardships and shed his blood on more
fields than one, had blotted the record of his heroism with a deed of
treason. After the battle of Bemis's Height, in the fall of 1777, Arnold
was promoted by Congress to the rank of major-general. Being disabled
by his wound, he was made commandant of Philadelphia after the evac-
uation of the city by the British. Here he married the daughter of a
loyalist, and living in the old mansion of William Penn entered upon a
career of luxury and extravagance which soon overwhelmed him with
debt and bankruptcy. In order to keep up his magnificence, he began a
system of frauds on the commissary department of the army. His bear-
ing toward the citizens was that of a military despot ; the people groaned
under his tyranny, and charges were preferred against him by Congress.
344
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The cause was finally heard by a court-martial in December of 1779.
Arnold was convicted on two of the charges, and, by the order of the
court, was mildly reprimanded by Washington.
Professing unbounded jDatriotism, and seeming to forget the dis-
grace which his misconduct had brought upon him, Arnold applied for
and obtained command of the important fortress of West Point on the
Pludson. On the last day of July, 1780, he reached the camp and
assumed control of the most valuable arsenal and d^pot of stores in Amer-
ica. He had already formed the treasonable design of surrendering the
fort into tiie hands of the enemy. For months he had kept up a secret
correspondence with Sir Henry Clinton, and now the scheme ripened, on
Arnold's part, into an open proposition to betray his country for gold.
It was agreed that on a certain day the British fleet should ascend the
Hudson, that the garrison should be divided and scattered, and the fc>rt-
ress given up without a struggle.
On the 21st of September Sir Henry Clinton sent Major John
Audr6 up the river to hold a personal conference with Arnold and make
the final arrangements for the surrender.
Andr6, through whom the correspondence
between Arnold and Clinton had been car-
ried on, was a former acquaintance of Ar-
nold's wife, and now held the post of adju-
tant-general in the British army. He went
to the conference, not as a spy, but wearing
full uniform; and it was agreed that the
meeting should be held outside of the Ameri-
can lines. About midnight of the 21st he
went ashore from the Vulture, a sloop of
war, and met Arnold in a thicket on the
west bank of the river, two miles below
Haverstraw. Daydawn approached, and
the conspirators were obliged to hide
themselves. In doing so they entered the
American lines ; Arnold gave the password, and Andre, disguising him-
self, assumed the character of a spy.
During the next day the traitor and his victim remained concealed
at the house of a tory named Smith. Here the awful business was com-
pleted. Arnold was to surrender West Point, its garrisons and stores,
and to receive for his treachery ten thousand pounds and a commission as
brigadier in the British army. All preliminaries being settled, papers
containing a full description of West Point, its defences and the best
SCKNK OF ARNOLD'S
TREASON, 1780.
THE END. 345
method of attack were made out and given to Andre, who secreted the
dangerous documents in his stockings. During that day an American
battery drove the Vulture from its moorings in the river ; and at night-
fall Andre was obliged to cross to the other side and proceed by land
toward New York. He passed the American outposts in safety ; but at
Tarrytown, twenty-five miles from the city, he was suddenly confronted
by three militiamen * who stripped him, found his papers, and delivered
him to Colonel Jameson at North Castle. Through that officer's amazing
stupidity Arnold was at once notified that John Anderson — that being
the assumed name of Andre — had been taken with his passport and some
papers " of a very dangerous tendency." Arnold, on hearing the news,
fled to the river and escaped on board the Vulture. Andre was tried by
a court-martial at Tappan, and condemned to death. On the 2d of Oc-
tober he was led to the gallows, and, under the stern code of war, was
hanged. Though dying the death of a felon, he met his doom like a
brave man, and after times have commiserated his sad fate. Arnold
received \\\s,pay.
In the dark days of December there came a ray of light fi-om
Europe. For several years Holland had secretly favored the Americans ;
now she began negotiations for a commercial treaty similar to that already
existing between France and the United States. Great Britain discovered
the purposes of the Dutch government ; there were angry remonstrances,
and then, on the 20th of December, an open declaration of war. Thus
the Netherlands were added to the enemies of England ; it seemed that
George III. and his ministers would have enough to do without further
efforts to enforce a stamp-act or levy a tax on tea.
CHAPTER XLIV.
THE END.
FOR the Americans the year 1781 opened gloomily. The condition
of the array was desperate — no food, no pay, no clothing. Even the
influence of Washington was not sufficient to quiet the growing discontent
of the soldiery. On the first day of January the whole Pennsylvania
line, numbering nearly two thousand, mutinied, left their camp at Morris-
* John Paulding, David Williams and Isaac van Wart. Congress afterward rewarded
them with silver medals and pensions for life.
346 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
town and marched toward Philadelphia. General Wayne, after trying in
vain to prevent the insurrection, went with his men, still hoping to con-
trol them. At Princeton they were met by two emissaries from Sir Henry
Clinton, and were tempted with offers of money, clothing and release from
military service if they would desert the American standard. The mu-
tinous patriots made answer by seizing the British agents and delivering
tliem to General Wayne to be hanged as spies. For this deed the com-
missioners of Congress, who now arrived, offered the insurgents a large
reward, but the reward was indignantly refused. Washington, knowing
how shamefully the army had been neglected by Congress, was not un-
willing that the mutiny should take its own course. The congressional
agents were therefore left to adjust the difficulty with the rebellious
troops. But the breach was easily healed ; a "^ew liberal concessions on
the part of the government sufficed to quiet the mutiny.
About the middle of the same month the New Jersey brigade, sta-
tioned at Pompton, revolted. This movement Washington quelled by
force. General Robert Howe marched to the camp with five hundred
regulars and compelled twelve of the principal mutineers to execute the
two leaders of the revolt. From that day order was completely restored.
These insurrections had a good rather than a bad effect; Congress was
thoroughly alarmed, and immediate provisions were made for the better
support of the army. An agent was sent to France to obtain a further
loan of money. Robert Morris was appointed secretary of finance ; the
Bank of North America was organized ; and although the outstanding
debts of the United States could not be paid, yet all future obligations were
promptly met, for Morris and his friends pledged their private fortunes
to sustain the credit of the government.
In the North military movements were begun by Arnold. On
arriving at New York the traitor had received the promised commission,
and was now a brigadier-general in the British army. In the preceding
November, Washington and Major Henry Lee formed a plan to capture
him. Sergeant John Champe undertook the daring enterprise, deserted
to the enemy, entered New York, joined Arnold's company, and with two
assistants concerted measures to abduct him from the city and convey him
to the American camp. But Arnold suddenly moved his quarters, and
the plan was defeated. A month afterward he was given command of a
fleet and a land-force of sixteen hundred men, and on the 16th of Decem-
ber left New York to make a descent on the coasts of Virginia.
Early in January the traitor entered James River and began war on
his countrymen. His proceedings were marked with much ferocity, but
not Avith the daring which characterized his former exploits. In the
THE END. 347
vicinity of Richmond a vast quantity of public and private property was
destroyed. The country along the river was devastated ; and when there
was nothing left to excite his cupidity or gratify his revenge, Arnold took
up his headquarters in Portsmouth, a few miles south of Hampton Roads.
Again Washington planned his capture. The French fleet, anchored at
J^ewport, was ordered to sail for Virginia to co-operate with La Fayette,
who was sent in the direction of Portsmouth with a detachment of twelve
hundred men. But Admiral Arbuthnot, being apprised of the movement,
sailed from New York and drove the French squadron back to Rhode
Island. La Fayette, deprived of the expected aid, was forced to abandon
the undertaking, and Arnold again escaped.
About the middle of April General Phillips arrived at Portsmouth
witli a force of two thousand British regulars. Joining his troops with
those of Arnold, he assumed command of the whole, and again the fertile
districts of Lower Virginia were ravaged with fire and sword. Early in
May, Phillips died, and for seven days Arnold held the supreme com-
mand of the British forces in Virginia. That was the height of his trea-
sonable glory. On the 20th of the month Lord Cornwallis arrived at
Petersburg and ordered him to begone. Returning to New York, he
received from Clinton a second detachment, entered the Sound, landed at
New London, in his native State, and captured the town. Fort Griswold,
which was defended by Colonel Ledyard with a hundred and fifty militia-
men, was carried by storm. When Ledyard surrendered, the British
officer who received his sword stabbed him to death ; it was the signal
for a massacre of the garrison, seventy-three of whom were murdered in
€old blood ; of the remainder, thirty were wounded and the rest made
prisoners. With this bloody and ignominious deed the name of Arnold
disappears from American history.
Meanwhile, some of the most stirring events of the war had occurred
at the South. At the close of the preceding year General Greene had
taken command of the American army — which was only the shadow of
an army — at Charlotte, North Carolina. Cornwallis had fallen back in
the direction of Camden. Greene with great energy reorganized his
forces and divided them into an eastern and a western division ; the com-
mand of the latter was given to General Morgan. In the first days of
January this gallant officer was sent into the Spartanburg district of Soutli
Carolina to repress the tories and encourage the patriot militia. His suc-
cess was such as to exasperate Cornwallis, wlio immediately despatched
Colonel Tarleton with his famous cavalry legion to destroy Morgan's
forces or drive them out of the State. The Americans, apprised of Tarle-
ton's approach, took a favorable position at the Cowpens, where, on the
348 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
17th of January, they were attacked by the British, eleven hundred strong.
Tarleton, confident of success, made the onset with impetuosity ; but Mor-
gan's men sustained the shock with firmness, and, when the enemy's re-
serves were called into action, either held their ground or retired in good
order. At the crisis of the battle the American cavalry, commanded by
Colonel William Washington, made a furious charge and scattered the
British dragoons like chaff before them. The rout Avas complete — the vic-
tory decisive. Washington and Tarleton had a personal encounter on the
field, and the latter fled with a sword-gash in his hand. His corps was
annihilated ; ten British officers and ninety privates were killed, and five
hundred and twenty-three were captured. Two pieces of artillery, eight
hundred muskets and two flags were among the trophies of the battle.
When Cornwallis, who was encamped with his army thirty miles
down the Catawba, heard of the disaster to his arms, he made a ra})id
march up the river to reach the fords in Morgan's rear. But Gi^ecne,
wiio had also heard the news, hastened to the camp of JNIorgan, took com-
mand in person and began a hasty retreat. At the same time he sent
word to General Huger, who commanded the eastern division, to fall
back toward Charlotte, where it was proposed to form a junction of the
two wings of the army. On the 28th of January Morgan's division
reached the Catawba and crossed to the northern bank, with prisoners,
spoils and baggage. Within two hoiu's the British van arrived at the
ford ; but it was already sunset, and Cornwallis concluded to wait for the
morning; then he would cross and Avin an easy victory. During the
night the clouds opened and poured down torrents ; in the morning the
river was swollen to a flood. It was many days before the British forced
their way across, dispersing the militia on the opposite bank. And now
beffan a second race, this time for the fords of the Yadkin.
The distance was sixty miles and the roads wretched. In two day»
the Americans reached the river. The crossing Avas nearly effected, Avhen
the British appeared in sight, attacked the rearguard and captured a fe\Y
wagons; nothing else Avas injured. That night tlio Yadkin Avas made
impassable by rains in the mountains, and ConiAvallis Avas again delayed;
Greene pressed forward to Guilford Court-House, Avhere he arrived on the
7th of February. The British marched up the Y''adkin to the shalloAV
ford at Huntsville, AA^here, on the 9th of the month, they succeeded in
crossing. The lines of retreat and pursuit AA^ere now parallel, and the tAvo
armies Avere less than tAventy-five miles apart. A third time the race
began, and again the Americans Avon it. On the 13th, Greene, with the
main division, crossed the Dan into Virgin ua, and on tne louowmg aay
the American rearo-uard entered thf* boats and was safe. The British van
o
THE END. 349
was already in sight and the whole army but a few miles distant. Never
was a retreat more skillfully conducted. Cornwallis, mortified at his
repeated failures, abandoned the pursuit and retired with his at^my to
Hillsborough.
Once in Virginia, Greene was rapidly reinforced. After a few days
of recruiting and rest he felt himself strong enough to begin offensive
movements. On the 22d of February he recrossed the Dan into North
Carolina. Meanwhile, Cornwallis had despatched Tarleton with a body
of cavalry into the region between the Haw and Deep Rivers to encourage
the tories. Being informed of this movement, Greene sent Colonel Lee
into the same district. Three hundred loyalists, already under arms,
were marching to join Tarleton. On the route they were intercepted by
the American cavalry, whom, supposing them to be British, they saluted
with a shout of " Long live the king !" Colonel Lee and his men quietly
surrounded the unsuspecting tories, fell upon them as a band of traitors,
and killed or captured the entire company.
By the addition of the Virginia militia Greene's army now num-
bered four thousand four hundred men. Determining to avoid battle no
longer, he marched to Guilford Court-House, took a strong position and
awaited his antagonist. Cornwallis, accepting the challenge, at once
moved forward to the attack. On the 15th of March the two armies met
on Greene's chosen ground, and a severe but indecisive battle was fought.
The forces of Greene were superior in numbers, and those of Cornwallis in
discipline. If the American militia had stood firm, the result would not
have been doubtful ; but the raw recruits behaved badly, broke line and
fled. Confusion ensued ; the Americans fought hard, but were eventually
driven from the field and forced to retreat for several miles. In killed
and wounded the British loss was greatest ; but large bodies of the militia
returned to their homes, reducing Greene's army to less than three thou-
sand. Nevertheless, to the British the result was equivalent to a defeat.
Cornwallis now boasted, made big proclamations, and then re-
treated. On the 7th of April he reached the sea-coast at Wilmington-
and immediately thereafter proceeded to Virginia. How he arrived at
Petersburg, superseded Arnold and sent him out of the State has already
been narrated. The British forces in the Carolinas remained under com-
mand of Lord Rawdon, who was j)osted with a strong division at Cam-
den, With him General Greene, after the departure of Cornwallis, was
left to contend. The American army was accordingly advanced into
South Carolina. A detachment was sent against Fort Watson, on the
east bank of the Santee, and the place was obliged to surrender. Greene
marched with the main body to Hobkirk's Hill, a short distance north of
350 HISTORY OF THE VISITED STATES.
Camden, posted his men in a strong position and awaited the movements
of Rawdon. What that officer would do was not long a question of doubt.
On the 2oth of April he moved from Camden with his entire force and
attacked the American camp. For once General Greene came near being
surprised ; but his men were swiftly formed for battle ; Rawdon's column
was badly arranged ; and for a while it seemed that the entire British
force would be slain or captured. Just at the critical moment, however,
some valuable American officers who commanded in the centre were
killed; their regiments, becoming confused, fell back; Rawdon saw his
advantage, pressed forward, broke the centre, captured the hill, and. won
the day. The Americans retired from the field, but saved their artillery
and bore away the wounded. Again the genius of Greene made defeat
seem little less than victory.
On the lOtli of JNIay Lord Rawdon evacuated Camden and retired
to Eutaw Springs, sixty-five miles above the mouth of the Sautee. The
British posts at Granby, Orangeburg, Fort Mott and Augusta fell suc-
'iessively into the hands of the patriots. By the 5th of June only Eutaw
Springs, Charleston and Ninety-Six remained in possession of the enemy.
The latter place was already besieged by General Greene, who, after the
battle of Hobkirk's Hill, advanced to Fort Granby, and thence to Ninety-
Six. For twenty-seven days the siege w^as pressed with vigor. Tiie
supply of water was cut off from the fort, and the garrison could not
have held out more than two days longer; but Lord Rawdon was
rapidly approaching with a force of two thousand men ; and the Ameri-
cans, after an unsuccessful assault, were obliged, on the 18th of June, to
raise the siege and retreat. Rawdon pursued, but Greene escaped, as
usual, and the British, abandoning Ninety-Six, fell back to Orangeburg.
Greene, with ceaseless activity, followed the retreating enemy, and would,
but for their strength, have assaulted Rawdon's works. Deeming the
position impregnable, the American general recrossed the Santee and took
his station on the highlands in Sumter district. Here, in the healthiul
air of the hill-country, he passed the sickly months of summer.
Sumter, Lee and Marion were constantly abroad, traversing the
country in all directions, cutting off supplies from the enemy, breaking
his lines of communication and smiting the tories right and left. Lord
Rawdon now resigned the command of the British forces to Colonel Stuart
and went to Charleston. While there he became a jirincipal actor in one
of the most shameful scenes of the Revolution. Colonel Isaac Hayne, an
eminent patriot who had formerly taken an oath of allegiance to the king,
was caught in command of a troop of American cavalry. He was at once
taken to Charleston, arraigned before Colonel Balfour, the commandant.
THE END.
351
hTirried through the mockery of a trial and condemned to death. Eaw-
don gave his sanction, and on the 31st of July Colonel Hayne was hanged.
Just men in Europe joined with the patriots of America in denoimcing the
act as wortky of barbarism.
On the 22d of August General Greene left the heights of the Santee
and marched toward Orangeburg. The British decamped at his approach,
and took post at Eutaw Springs, forty miles below. The Americans
pressed after them and overtook them on the 8th of September. One
of the fiercest battles
of the war ensued ; and
General Greene was
denied a decisive vic-
tory only by the bad
conduct of some of his
men, who, before the
field was fairly won,
abandoned themselves
to eating and drink-
ing in the enemy's
camp. Stuart rallied
his troops, returned to
the charge and regain-
ed his position.
Greene, after losing
five hundred and fifty-
five men, gave over
the struggle. The
British lost in killed
and wounded nearly
seven hundred, and
more than five hun-
dred prisoners. On
the day after the battle Stuart hastily retreated to Monk's Corner ; Greene
followed with his army, and after two months of manoeuvring and de-
sultory warfare the British were driven into Charleston. In the mean
time, General St. Clair had cleared North Carolina by forcing the enemy
to evacuate Wilmington. In the whole country south of Virginia only
Charleston and Savannah remained under dominion of the king's army ;
the latter city was evacuated by the British on the 11th of July, and the
former on the 14th of December, 1782. Such was the close of the Revo-
lutiou in the Carolinas and Georgia.
QENEBAIi GREENE.
352 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
But the final scene was to be enacted in Virginia. There, in the
last days of April, 1781, Cornwallis took command of the British army
and began to ravage the country on both banks of the James. In the
course of the following two months property, public and private, wai
destroyed to the value of fifteen million dollars. La Fayette, to whom
the defence of the State had been entrusted, was unable to meet Corn
wallis in the field, but watched his movements with sleepless vigilance.
While the British were in the vicinity of Richmond a detachment under
Tarleton proceeded as far west as Charlottesville, where the Virginia
legislature was in session. The town was taken, the country devastated,
and seven members of the assembly made prisoners. Governor Jefferson
escaped only by riding into the mountains.
When there was little left to destroy, Cornwallis marched down
the north bank of the James to Green Springs, eight miles above the site
of Jamestown. He had received orders from Sir Henry Clinton to de-
scend the river and take such a position on the coast as would keep the
army within supporting distance of New York ; for Clinton was very
apprehensive that Washington and the French would attack him. La
Fayette hovered upon the rear of Cornwallis ; and on the 6th of July,
when it was supposed that the main body of the enemy had crossed the
James, General Wayne, who led the American advance, suddenly attacked
the whole Britisli army. Cornwallis was so surprised by the audacious
onset that v.hen W>.yne, seeing his mistake, made a hasty retreat, no pur-
suit was attempted. The loss of the two armies was equal, being a hun-
dred and twenty on each side. After the passage of James River, the
British marched to Portsmouth, where Arnold had had his headquarters
in the previous spring There Cornwallis would have fortified himself;
but the orders of Clinton were otherwise ; and in the first days of August
the army was again embarked and conveyed to Yorktown, on the southern
bank of York River, a few miles above the mouth.
La Fayette quickly advanced into the peninsula and took post but
eight miles distant from the British. From this position he sent urgent
despatches to Washington, beseeching him to come to Virginia and aid in
striking the enemy a fatal blow. A powerful French armament, com-
manded by Count de Grasse, was hourly expected in the Chesapeake,
and La Fayette saw at a glance that if a fleet could be anchored in tJic
mouth of York River, cutting off retreat, the doom of Cornwallis would
be sealed. During the months of July and August, Washington, from
his camp on the Hudson, looked wistfully to the South. But all the while
Clinton was kept in feverish alarm by false despatches, written for the
purpose of falling into his hands. Thc^e intercepted messages indicated
THE END.
353
that the Americans and French would immediately begin the siege of
New York ; and for that Clinton made ready. When, in the last days
of August, he was informed that Washington had broken up his camp
and was already marching with his whole army toward Virginia, the
British general would not believe it, but went on preparing for a siege.
Washington pressed rapidly forward, paused two days at Mount Vernon,
where he had not been for six years, and met La Fayette at Williams-
burg. Meanwhile, on the 30th of August, the French fleet, numbering
twenty-eight ships of the line, with nearly four thousand troops on board,
had reached the Chesapeake and safely anchored in the mouth of York
River. Cornwallis, with the British army, was blockaded both by sea
and land.
To add still further to the strength of the allies. Count de Barras,
who commanded the French flotilla at Newport, sailed into the Chesa-
peake Avith eight ships of the
line and ten transports, bear-
ing cannon for the siege. On
the 5th of September the
English admiral Graves ap-
peared in the bay, and a naval
battle ensued, in which the
British ships were so roughly
handled that they returned
to New York. On the 28th
of September the allied
armies, superior in numbers
and confident of success, en-
camped around Yorktown.
The story of the siege is brief.
Tarleton, who occupied Glou-
cester Point, on the other side
of the river, made one spirited sally, but was driven back with severe
loss. On the night of the 6th of October the trenches were opened at the
distance of six hundred yards from the British works. The cannonade
was constant and effective. On the 11th of the month the allies drew
their second parallel withm three hundred yards of Cornwallis's redoubts.
On the night of the 14th the enemy's outer works were carried by storm.
At daydawn of the 16 th the British made a sortie, only to be hurled back
into their entrenchments. On the next day Cornwallis proposed a sur-
render; on the 18th terms of capitulation were drawn up and signed;
and at two o'clock in the afternoon of the 19th Major-General O'Hara—
SIEGE OF YORKTOWN, OCTOBER, 1781.
354 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
for Cornwall is, feigning sickness, remained in his tent — led the whole
British army from the trenches into an open field, where, in the presence
cf the allied ranks of France and America, seven thousand two hundred
and forty-seven English and Hessian soldiers laid down their arms, de-
livered their standards, and became prisoners of war. Eight hundred
and forty sailors were also surrendered. Seventy-five brass and thirty-
one iron guns were taken, together with all the accoutrements of the
army.
By a swift courier the news was borne to Congress. On the even-
ing of the 23d the messenger rode into Philadelphia. When the sentinels
of the city called the hour of ten that night, they added, " and Cornwallls
is taken." On the morrow Congress assembled, and before that august
body the despatch of Washington was read. The members, exulting and
weeping for gladness, went in concourse with the citizens to the Dutch
Lutheran church and turned the afternoon into a thanksgiving. The note
of rejoicing sounded through the length and breadth of the land ; for it
was seen that the dominion of the Briton in America was for ever broken.
After the surrender the conquered army was marched under guard
to the barracks of Lancaster. Washington, with the victorious Americans-
and French, returned to the camps of New Jersey and the Hudson. On
the Continent of Europe the news was received with every demonstration
of gladness. In England the king and his ministers heard the tidings
with mortification and rage ; but the English people were either secretly
pleased or openly rejoiced. During the fall and winter the ministerial
majority in Parliament fell off rapidly; and on the 20th of March, 1782,
Lord North and his friends, unable longer to conduct the government,
resigned their offices. A new ministry was immediately formed, favor-
able to America, favorable to freedom, favorable to peace. In the begin-
ning of May the command of the British forces in the United States was
transferred from Clinton to Sir Guy Carleton, a man friendly to American
interests. The hostile demonstrations of the enemy, now confined to New
York and Charleston, ceased ; and Washington made no efforts to dis-'
lodge the foe, for the war had really ended.
In the summer of 1782 Richard Oswald was sent by Parliament
to Paris. The object of his mission was to confer with Franklin and
Jay, the ambassadors of the United States, in regard to the terms of
peace. Before the discussions were ended, John Adams, arriving from
Amsterdam, and Henry Laurens from London, entered into the negotia-
tions. On the 30th of November preliminary articles of peace were
agreed to and signed on the part of Great Britain by Oswald, and on be-
Jbalf of the United States by Franklin, Adams, Jay and Laurens. I»
THE END. 355
the following April the terms were ratified by Congress; but it was
not until the 3d of September, 1783, that a final treaty was effected be-
tween all the nations that had been at war. On that day the ambassadors
of Holland, Spain^ England, France and the United States, in a solemn
conference at Paris, agreed to and signed the articles of a permanent
peace.
The terms of the Teeaty of 1783 were briefly these: A full
and complete recognition of the independence of the United States ; the
recession by Great Britain of Florida to Spain ; the surrender of all the
remaining territory east of the Mississippi and south of the great lakes to
the United States ; the free navigation of the Mississippi and the lakes
by American vessels ; the concession of mutual rights in the Newfound-
land fisheries ; and the retention by Great Britain of Canada and Nova
Scotia, with the exclusive control of the St. Lawrence.
Early in August Sir Guy Carleton received instructions to evacuate
New York city. Three months were spent in making arrangements for
this important event. Finally, on the 25th of November, everything
was in readiness ; the British army was embarked on board the fleet ; the
sails were spread ; the ships stood out to sea ; dwindled to white specks
on the horizon ; disappeared. The Briton was gone. After the struggles
and sacrifices of an eight years' war the patriots had achieved the inde-
pendence of their country. The United States of America took an equal
station among the nations of the earth.
Nine days after Carletou's departure there was a most affecting
scene in the city. Washington assembled his officers and bade them a
final adieu. When they were met, the chieftain spoke a few affectionate
words to his comrades, who came forward in turn and with tears and
sobs which the veterans no longer cared to conceal bade him farewell.
Washington then walked to Whitehall, followed by a vast concourse of
citizens and soldiers, and thence departed to Annapolis, where Congress
was in session. On his way he paused at Philadelphia and made to the
proper officers a report of his expenses during the war. The account was
in his own handwriting, and covered a total expenditure of seventy-four
thousand four hundred and eighty-five dollars — all correct to a cent.
The route of the chief from Paulus's Hook to Annapolis was a continuous
triumph. The people by hundreds and thousands flocked to the villages
and roadsides to see him pass ; gray-headed statesmen to speak words of
praise ; young men to shout with enthusiasm ; maidens to strew his way
with flowers.
On the 23d of December Washington was introduced to Congress.
To that body of patriotic sages he delivered an address full of feeling.
•^
356 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
wisdom and modesty. Then with that dignity which always marked his
conduct he surrendered his commission as commander-in-chief of the
American army. General Mifflin, the president of Congress, responded
in an eloquent manner, and then the hero retired to his home at Mount
Vernon. The man whom, the year before, some disaffected soldiers were
going to make king of America, now, by his own act, became a citizen
of the Eepublic.
CHAPTER XLY.
CONFEDERATION AND UNION.
DURING the progress of the Revolution the civil government of the
United States was in a deplorable condition. Nothing but the im-
minent peril of the country had, in the first place, led to the calling of a
Continental Congress. And when that body assembled, it had no method
of proceeding, no constitution, no power of efficient action. The two
great wants of the country were money to carry on the war and a central
authority to direct the war: the former of these was never met; and
Washington was made to supply the latter. Whenever Congress would
move in the direction of a firmer government, division would spring up,
and action would be checked by the remonstrance of jealous colonies.
Nevertheless, the more far-seeing statesmen of the times labored constantly
to create substantial political institutions.
Foremost of all those who worked for better government M-as Ben-
jamin Franklin. As early as the times of the French and Indian War
he began fo agitate the question of a permanent union of the colonies.
During the troubled years just preceding the Revolution he brooded over
his cherished project, and in 1775 laid before Congress the plan of a per-
petual confederation of the States. But the attention of that body Avas
wholly occupied with the stirring events of the day, and Franklin's
measure received but little notice. Congress, without any real authority,
began to conduct the government, and its legislation was generally ac-
cepted by the States. Still, the central authority was only an authority
by sufferance, and was liable at any time to be annulled by the caprice
of State legislatures.
Under such a system thinking men grew restless. On the 11th of
June, 1776, a committee was appointed by Congress to prepare a plan
CONFEDERATION AND UNION. 357
of confederation. After a month the work was completed and laid before
the house. Another month was spent in fruitless debates, and then the
question was laid over till the following spring. In April of 1777 the
discussion was resumed, and continued through the summer. Meanwhile,
the power of Great Britain being overthrown, the States had all adopted
republican governments, and the sentiment of national union had made
considerable headway. Finally, on the 15th of November, a vote was
taken in Congress, and the articles of confederation reported by the com-
mittee were adopted. The next step was to transmit the articles to the
several State legislatures for ratification. The time thus occupied ex-
tended to the following June, and then the new frame of government was
returned to Congress with many amendments. These having been con-
sidered and the most serious objections removed, the articles were signed
by the delegates of eight States on the 9th of July, 1778. Later in the
same month the representatives of Georgia and North Carolina affixed
their signatures. In November the delegates of New Jersey, and in the
following February those of Delaware, signed the compact. Maryland
held aloof; and it was not until March of 1781 that the consent of that
commonwealth could be obtained. Thus the Revolution was nearly
ended before the new system was finally ratified.
The government of the United States under the articles of con-
federation was a democratic republic. It presented itself under the form
of A Loose Union of Independent Commonwealths — a con-
federacy of sovereign States. The executive and legislative powers of
the general government were vested in Congress — a body composed of
not less than two nor more than seven representatives from each State.
But Congress could exercise no other than delegated powers^ the sover-
eignty w^ reserved to the States. The most important of the exclusive
privileges of Congress were the right of making war and peace, the regu-
lation of foreign intercourse, the power to receive and send ambassadors,
the control of the coinage of money, the settlement of disputed boundaries
and the care of the public domain. There was no chief magistrate of the
Republic ; and no general judiciary was provided for. The consent of
nine States was necessary to complete an act of legislation. In voting
each State cast a single ballot. The union of the States was declared to
be perpetual.
On the day of the ratification of the articles by Maryland the old
Congress adjourned, and on the following morning reassembled under the
new form of government. From the very first the inadequacy of that
government was manifest. To beg^n with, it contradicted the doctrines
of the Declaration of Independence. Congress had but a shadow of
S58 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
authority, and that shadow, inMead of proceeding from the people,
emanated from States which were declared to be sovereign and inde--
pendent. The first great duty of the new government was to provide
for the payment of the war debt, which had now reached the sum of
thirty-eight milHon dollars. Congress could only recommend to the
several States the levying of a sufficient tax to meet the indebtedness.
Some of the States made the required levy ; others were dilatory ; others
refused. At the very outset the government was balked and thwarted.
The serious troubles that attended the disbanding of the army were trace-
able rather to the inability than to the indisposition of Congress to pay the
soldiers. The princely fortune of Robert Morris was exhausted and him-
self brought to poverty in a vain effort to sustain the credit of the govern-
ment. For three years after the treaty of peace public aifairs Avere in a
condition bordering on chaos. The imperiled state of the Republic was
viewed with alarm by the sagacious patriots who had carried the Revolu-
tion to a successful issue. It was seen that unless the articles of confedera-
tion could be replaced with a better system the nation would go to ruin.
The project of remodeling the government originated at Mount
Vernon. In 1785, Washington, in conference with a company of states-
men at his home, advised the calling of a convention to meet at Annapolis
in the following year. The proposition was received with favor ; and in
September of 1786 the representatives of five States assembled. The
question of a tariff on imports was discussed ; and then the attention of
the delegates was turned to a revision of the articles of confederation.
Since only a minority of the States were represented in the conference, it
was resolved to adjourn until May of the following year, and all the
States were urgently requested to send representatives at that time.
Congress also invited the several legislatures to ajipoint delegates to the
proposed convention. All of the States except Rhode Island responded
to the call ; and on the second Monday ia May, 1787, the representatives
assembled at Philadelphia. Washington, who was a delegate from Vir-
ginia, was chosen president of the convention. A desultory discussion
followed until the 29th of the month, when Edmund Randolph intro-
duced a resolution to set aside the articles of confederation and adopt a
new constitution. There was further debate ; and then a committee waa
appointed to revise the articles. Early in September the work was done j
the report of the committee was adopted ; and that report was the Con-
stitution OF THE United States.* At the same time it was resolved
to send copies of the new instrument to the several legislatures for ratifi-
cation or rejection.
* The Constitution was written by Gouverneur Morris, of Pennsylvania.
CONFEDERATION AND UNION.
359
While the constitutional convention was in session at Philadel-
phia the last colonial Congress was sitting in New York. The latter
body was in a feeble and distracted condition. Only eight States
were represented. It was evident that the old Confederation, under
which the colonies had won their freedom, was tottering to its fall.
Nevertheless, before the
adjournment of Con-
gress, a measure was suc-
cessfully carried through
which was only second in
importance to the forma-
tion of tlie constitution.
This was the organiza-
tion of THE North-
western Territory.
As a preliminary meas-
ure this vast domain was
<;eded to the United
States by Virginia, New
York, Massachusetts,
and Connecticut. For
the government of the
territory an ordinance,
drawn up by Mr. Jeffer-
son, was adopted on the
13th of July, 1787. General Arthur St. Clair, then president of Congress,
received the appointment of military governor, and in the summer of
the following year began his duties with headquarters at Marietta.
By the terms of the ordinance it was stipulated that not less than
three nor more than five States should be formed out of the great
territory thus brought under the dominion of civilization ; that the
States when organized should be admitted on terms of equality with
the original members of the confederation, and that slavery should be
prohibited. Out of this noble domain the five great States of Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin were destined in after
times to be formed and added to the Union.
On the question of adopting the Constitution the people were
■divided. It was the first great political agitation in the country.
Those who favored the new frame 'of government were called Fed-
eralists; those who opposed, Anti-Federalists or Republicans.
The leaders of the former party were Washington, Jay, Madison, and
ALEXANDER HAMILTON.
360 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Hamilton, the latter statesman throwing the whole force of his genius
and learning into the controversy. In those able papers called the Fed-
eralist he and Madison successfully answered every objection of the
anti-Federal party. Hamilton was the first and perhaps the greatest
expounder of constitutional liberty in America. To him the Republic
owes a debt of j)eri3etual gratitude for having established on a firm and
enduring basis the true principles of free government.
Under the Constitution of the United States the powers of gov-
ernment are arranged under three heads — Legislative, Executive,
and Judicial. The legislative power is vested in Congress — a body
composed of a Senate and a House of Representatives. The members
of the Senate are chosen by the legislatures of the several States, and
serve for a period of six years. Each State is represented by two Sen-
ators. The members of the House of Representatives are elected by
the people of the respective States ; and each State is entitled to a num-
ber of representatives proportionate to the population of that State.
The members of this branch are chosen for a term of two years. Con-
gress is the law-making power of the nation ; and all legislative ques-
tions of a general character are the appropriate subjects of congress-
ional action.
The executive power of the United States is vested in a Pres-^
ident, who is chosen for a period of four years by a body of men
called the electoral college. The electors composing the college are
chosen by the people of the several States ; and each State is entitled
to a number of electors equal to the number of its representatives and
senators in Congress. The duty of the President is to enforce the laws
of Congress in accordance Avith the Constitution. He is commander-
in-chief of the armies and navies of the United States. Over the
legislation of Congress he has the power of veto ; but a two-thirds con-
gressional majority may pass a law without the President's consent.
He has the right of appointing cabinet officers and foreign ministers;
but all of his appointments must be approved by the Senate. The
treaty-making power is also lodged with the President; but here again
the concurrence of the Senate is necessary. In case of the death, resig-
nation, or removal of the President, the Vice-President becomes chief
magistrate ; otherwise his duties are limited to presiding over the Senate.
The judicial power of the United States is vested in a supreme
court and in inferior courts established by Congress. The highest
judicial officer is the chief-justice. All the judges of the supreme and
inferior courts hold their offices during life or good behavior. The
jurisdiction of these courts extends to all causes arising under the
CONFEDERATION AND UNION 361
Constitution, laws, and treaties of the United States. The right of
trial by jury is granted in all cases except the impeachment of public
officers. Treason against the United States consists only in levying
war against them, or in giving aid and comfort to their enemies.
The Constitution further provides that full faith shall be given
in all the States to the records of every State ; that the citizens of any
State shall be entitled to the privileges of citizens in all the States;
that new territories may be organized and new States admitted into
the Union ; that to every State shall be guaranteed a republican form
of government ; and that the Constitution may be altered or amended
whenever the same is proposed by a two-thirds majority of both houses
of Congress, and ratified "by three-fourths of the legislatures of the sev-
eral States. In accordance with this last provision fifteen amendments
have been made to the Constitution. The most important of these are
the articles which guarantee religious freedom ; change the method of
electing President and Vice-President; abolish slavery; and forbid
the abridgment of suffrage on account of race or color.*
Such was the Constitution adopted, after much debate, for the
government of the American people. Would the people ratify it? or
had the work been done in vain? The little State of Delaware was
first to answer the question. In her convention on the 3d of Decem-
ber, 1787, the voice of the commonwealth was unanimhusly recorded
in favor of the new Constitution. Ten days later Pennsylvania gave
her decision by a vote of forty-six to twenty-three in favor of ratifi-
cation. On the 19th of December New Jersey added her approval
hy a unanimous vote; and on the 2d of the following month Georgia
did the same. On" the 9th of January the Connecticut convention
followed, with a vote of a hundred and twenty-eight to forty, in favor
of adoption. In Massachusetts the battle was hard fought and barely
won. A ballot, taken on the 6th of February, resulted in ratification
by the close vote of a hundred and eighty-seven to a hundred and
sixty-eight. This really decided the contest. On the 28th of April
Maryland rendered her decision by the strong vote of sixty-three to
twelve. Next came the ratification of South Carolina by a vote of a
hundred and forty-nine to seventy-three. In the New Hampshire
convention there was a hard struggle, but the vote for adoption finally
stood fifty-seven to forty-six, June 21st, 1788. This was the ninth
State, and the work was done. For, by its own terms, the new gov-
ernment was to go into operation when nine States should ratify. The
great commonwealth of Virginia still hesitated. Washington and
* See Appendix F.
362 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Madison were for the Constitution; but Jefferson and Henry were
opposed. Not until the 25th of June did her convention declare for
adoption, and then only by a vote of eighty-nine to seventy-nine.
It was now clear that the new government would be organized,
and this fact was brought to bear as a powerful argument in favor of
adoption by the convention at Poughkeepsie. The hope that New
York city would be the seat of the Federal government also acted as
a motive, and a motion to ratify was finally carried, July 27th, 1788.
Only Rhode Island and North Carolina persisted in their refusal. But
in the latter State a new convention was called, and on the 13th of
November, 1789, the Constitution was formally adopted. As to Rhode
Island, her pertinacity was in inverse ratio to her importance. At
length Providence and Newport seceded from the commonwealth; the
question of dividing the teritory between Massachusetts and Connecti-
cut was raised, and the refractory member at last yielded by adojDting
the Constitution, May 29th, 1790. Then, for the first time, the Eng-
lish-speaking race in the New World was united under a common gov-
ernment— strong enough for safety, liberal enough for freedom.
In accordance with the provisions of the Constitution and a reso-
lution of Congress, the first Wednesday of January, 1789, was named
as the time for the election of a chief magistrate. The peoj)le had but
one voice as to the man who should be honored with that trust. Early
in April the ballots of the electors were counted in the presence of
Congress, and George Washington was unanimously chosen President
and John Adams Vice-President of the United States. On the 14th
of the month Washington received notification of his election, and
departed for New York. His route thither was a constant triumph.
Maryland welcomed him at Georgetown. Philadelphia by her execu-
tive council, the trustees of her university, and the officers of the Cin-
<^,innati, did him honor. How did the people of Trenton exult in the
presence of the hero who twelve years before had fought their battle !
There over the bridge of the Assanpink they built a triumphal arch,
iind girls in white ran before, singing and strewing the way with flow-
ers. At Elizabethtown he was met by the principal officers of the gov-
ernment and welcomed to the capital where he was to become the first
cliief magistrate of a free and grateful people. With this auspicious
event the period of revolution and confederation ends, and the era of
nationality in tlie New Republic is ushered in. Long and glorious be
the history of that Republic, bought with the blood of patriots and
consecrated in the sorrows of our fiathers !
PART y.
IsTATIOJ^AL PEEIOD.
A. ». 1789—1882.
CHAPTER XLVI.
WASHINGTON'S ADMINISTRATION, 1789-1797.
ON" the 30th of April, 1789, "Washington was duly inaugurated first
President of the United States. The new government was to have
gone into operation on
the 4th of March, but
the event was con-
siderably delayed.
The inaugural cere-
mony was performed
on the balcony of the
old City Hall, on the
present site of the
Custom-House, in
AVall street. Chancel-
lor Livingston of New
York administered the
oath of office. The
streets and house-tops
were thronged with
people ; flags flutter-
ed ; cannon boomed
from the Battery. As
soon as the public cere-
mony was ended,
Washington retired to
the Senate chamber
and delivered his in-
augural address. The organization of the two houses of Congress had
^already been effected.
(363)
■WASHINGTON.
364 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The new government was embarrassed with many difficulties. The
opponents of the Constitution were not yet silenced, and from the begin-
ning they caviled at the measures of the administration. By the treaty
of 1783 the free navigation of the Mississippi had been guaranteed. Now
the jealous Spaniards of Xew Orleans hindered the passage of American
ships. The people of the West looked to the great river as the natural
outlet of their commerce ; they must be protected in their rights. On
many parts of the frontier the malignant Red men were still at war with
the settlers. As to financial credit, the United States had none. In the
very beginning of his arduous duties Washington was prostrated with
sickness, and the business of government was for many weeks delayed.
Not until September were the first important measures adopted.
On the 10th of that month an act was passed by Congress instituting a
department of foreign affairs, a treasury department and a department of
war. As members of his cabinet Washington nominated Jefferson, Knox
and Hamilton ; the first as secretary of foreign affairs ; the second, of war ;
and the third, of the treasuiy. In accordance with the provisions of the
Constitution, a supreme court was also organized, John Jay receiving the
appointment of first chief-justice. With him were joined as associate
justices John Rutledge of South Carolina, James Wilson of Pennsyl-
vania, William Cushing of Massachusetts, John Blair of Virginia,
and James Iredell of North Carolina. Edmund Randolph was chosen
attorney-general. Many constitutional amendments were now brought
forward, and ten of them adopted. By this action on the part of
Congress, the objections of North Carolina and Rhode Island were
removed and both States ratified the Constitution, the former in No-
vember of 1789 and the latter in the following May.
On the 29th of September, 1789, Congress adjourned until the
following January, and Washington availed himself of the opportu-
nity thus offered to make a tour of the Eastern States. Accompanied
by his secretaries, he set out in his carriage from New York on the
15th of October, and nine days afterward reached Boston. At every
point on the route the affection of the people, and especially of the
Revolutionary veterans, burst out in unbounded enthusiasm. On
reaching Boston the President was welcomed by Governor John
Hancock and the selectmen of the city. No pains were spared that
could add to the comfort and pleasure of the new nation's chief mag-
istrate. After remaining a week among the scenes associated with
his first command of the American army, he proceeded to Portsmouth
and thence returned with improved health and peace of mind by way
of Hartford to New York.
1789
93
97
1801
French
Oeor
Washington,
91. Vermon
the
89. North Carolina rat
90. Rhode Island
90. Seat of govern
92. K
Wash
91.
91. Bank of
John Adams, Vice-
Jo
John Jay, Chief-
Jeflferson, Secret
Hamilton, Sec
Knox, Secre
Revolution.
94. Partition of
93. Execution of Louis
93. Fall of the Girond
93. Reign of Te
94. Fall of Robes
ge III. 96. Gr
President.
t admitted into
Union,
ifies the Constitution
96. Te
ratifies the Constituti
ment at Philadelphia.
94. I' II Wayne's
93. Genet, French min
entucky admitted into
ington re-elected
Clair's dejeat.
the United States estab
iy Insur
95. Jay's T
94. Whisky Insur
President
hn Adams re-elected
Justice,
ary of State,
retary of Treasury,
tary of War.
Napo
97. Pinckney rejected
Poland.
XVI. 99. Overth
ists. 99. Napole
rror.
pierre. 1800
eat political disturbanc
1800.
to
nnessee admitted into
on. 1800.
John Adams,
99. Washin
98. War with Fra
victory.
ister at Washington,
the Union. 99. Treaty
President.
lished.
rection.
reaty.
Thomas Jefferson,
Vice-President.
^m^-mnf
leon Bonapar
by the French Directo
4. The
row of the Directory.
on,First Consul. . ^t
' 4. Nap
Bombardment of
Copenhagen.
Marengo.
es in England.
2. Ohio admitted
Removal of the seat of
Washington, D. C.
the Union.
Passage of the Alien
President.
gton dies at Mount Ver
nee.
4. Ha
with France.
Thomas Jeffer
te.
great I
oleon, I
^Tra,
6.
6.
5.1)1.
into tb
govern) i
and Sed
non, a. '
milton
6.
Vice-President.
1. Aaron Burr, Vice-
1. War with Tripoli.
3. Commod
3. Purchase
son,
5, The
lis
Jefft
Preside!
Georg
ore Prei
of Loui
9
13
8. The
rebellion.
'. Treaty of
jror.
ir.
I Jena.
ikadeofthe
rlitz.
Lion.
\ Laws.
3d in a du
•r's conspir
lident.
sm of patro
in the pub
on re-elec
7.Firststea
7. Attack
1. Passage
linton, Yi
sent to the
m.
14. Deposition of
9. Divorce of Josephi ne 14. Louis XVIII.
Peninsular War.
10. Marriage of N
Tilsit. to Maria
12. In
Orders in Coun
9.
Wagram.
coast from Brest to
the Elbe.
11
11.
el.
acy.
James
12. Su
12. Su
Tippe
12. H
\ThePr
12. Se
12. W
12. IM
George Clinton re
12
nage estab-
lic offices.
ted President.
12.
12.
12.
12.
15. »
Wa
apoleon
Louisa.
vasion of liussia.
cil. 15. Treaty
15. Rise of
16. Pa
15.
li Jl Bomb
15. War wi
17
Napoleon.
terloo, and banishment
of Paris.
the Radical Party in
George IV.
rliamentary reforms.
ardment of Algiers.
th Algiers.
31
1835
mboat on the Hudson
on the Chesapeake,
of the Embargo Act.
ce-President.
Mediterranean.
12. Lo
Madison, Presid
rrender of Mackinaw,
rrender of Detroit.
canoe. 14. Hartford Co
enry Dearborn* appoin
14. li 11 Capture
esident and Little Belt,
Madison re-elec
cond embargo.
ar declared against Gr
Fort Dearborn.
elected Vice-President,
14. Capture and
Queenstown.
The Constitution and
14. Treaty of Gh
The Wasp and'theFrol
The United States and
The Constitution and
13. wil i^rencA^owTO.
14. ^^i^'ori iJ/c
13. ill i^'orf if eij'S.
13. I^iy Perry's victo
\Z.^€^The Thames.
\5.¥^NeivOrlea
13.111 Horseshoe Bend.
13. |£1 The Homo,
r"^ The Chesapea
uisiana admitted into
Elbridge Gerry, Vi
21. Napoleon dies.
24. Charles X^
of Napoleon.
England.
ent.
nvention.
ted commander-in-chi
20. M
the
of York.
ted President.
eat Britain.
18. The Seminole
18. Capture of St.
burning of Washingt
James Monro
the Guerriere.
ent.
ic.
the Macedonian.
the Java.
18. Illinois admit
Henry.
Daniel Tompkins,
diana admitted into
ef.
aine admitted into-
Union.
13.
The Argus
. Lundy's
lA^kuPlattiburg.
14.
ry.
ns.
19. Alabam
in
and the Peacock,
ke and the Shannon.
the Union.
ce-President.
and the Pelican.
Lane.
17. Mississippi admitt
19. Florida
War.
Marks and Pensacola..
24. Vis-
it of La
on. Fayette.
e, President.
Monroe re elect-
ed President.
21. Missouri admitted
into the Union.
ted into the Union.
Vice-President,
the Union.
Tompkins re-elect-
ed Vice-President.
a admitted
to the Union.
21. Rise of the Slavery
agitation.
21. The Missouri Com-
promise.
ed into the Union,
ceded to the
United I States.
WASHINGTON'S ADMINISTRATION. 365
In the first months of his administration Washington was much
vexed about questions of ceremony and etiquette. How should he
appear in public ? How often ? What kind of entertainment should
he give ? Who should be invited ? What title should he bear ? And
in what manner be introduced ? In these matters there was no pre-
cedent to guide him; for who had ever held such a station before?
He must not, on the one hand, demean himself like a king, surrounded
with peers and courtiers, nor, on the other hand, must he degrade his
high office by such blunt democratical ceremonies as would render
himself ridiculous and the Presidency contemptible. In his embar-
rassment Washington sought the advice of Adams, Jefferson, Hamilton,
and others in regard to a suitable etiquette and ceremonial for the
Republican court. Adams in answer would have much ceremony;
Jefferson, none at all. The latter said : " I hope that the terms Excel-
lency, Honor, Worship, Esquire, and even Mr. shall shortly and
forever disappear from among us." Hamilton's reply favored a mod-
erate and simple formality ; and this view was adopted by Washington
as most consistent with the new frame of government. In the mean-
time Congress had declared that the chief magistrate should have no
title other than that of his office ; namely. President of the United
States. So with ceremonies few and simple the order of affairs in the
presidential office was established.
The national debt, however, was the greatest and most threat-
ening question ; but the genius of Hamilton triumphed over every
difficulty. The indebtedness of the United States, including the
revolutionary expenses of the several States, amounted to nearly
eighty millions of dollars. Hamilton adopted a broad and honest
policy. His plan, which was laid before Congress at the beginning
of the second session, proposed that the debt of the United States
due to American citizens, as well as the war debt of the individual
States, should be assumed by the general government, and that all
should be fully paid. By this measure the credit of the country was
vastly improved, even before actual payment was begun. As a
means of augmenting the revenues of the government a duty was
laid on the tonnage of merchant-ships, with a discrimination in favor
of American vessels ; and customs were levied on all imported arti-
cles. Hamilton's financial schemes were violently opposed; but his
policy prevailed, and the credit of the government was soon firmly
established.
The proposition to assume the debts of the States had been coupled
with another to fix the seat of government. After much discussion it was
'S66 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
agreed to establish the capital for ten years at Philadelphia, and afterward
at some suitable locality on the Potomac. The next important measure
was the organization of the territory south-west of the Ohio. In the
autumn of 1790 a M^ar broke out with the Miami Indians. Fort Wash-
ington, on the present site of Cincinnati, had been established as the
capital of the North-western Territory ; and General St. Clair had re=
ccived the appointment as governor. The Indians had fairly relinquished
their rights to the surrounding country; but other tribes came forward with
pretended claims, and went to war to recover their lost possessions. At
the close of September, General Harmar, with fourteen hundred troops,
set out from Fort Washington to chastise the hostile Miamis. After de-
stroying several villages and wasting the country as far as the Maumee,^
he divided his army into detachments. Colonel Hardin, who commanded
the Kentucky volunteers, was ambuscaded and his forces routed at a vil-
lage eleven miles from Fort Wayne; and on the 21st of October the
main division was defeated with great loss at the Maumee Ford. Gen-
eral Harmar was obliged to abandon the Indian country and retreat to
Fort Washington.
In the beginning of 1791 an act was passed by Congress establish-
ing THE Bank of the Uxited States. The measure originated with
the secretary of the treasury, and was violently opposed by Jefferson and
the anti-federal party. About the same time Vermont, which had been
an independent territory since 1777, adopted the Constitution, and on the
18th of February was admitted into the Union as the fourteenth State.
The claim of New York to the jurisdiction of the province had been pur-
chased, two years previously, for thirty thousand dollars. The first census
of the United States, completed for the year 1790, showed that the popu-
lation of the country had increased to three million nine hundred and
twentv-nine thousand souls.
After the defeat of Harmar the government adopted more vigorous
measures for the repression of Indian hostilities. On the 6th of Septem-
ber, 1791, General St. Clair, with an army of two thousand men, set out
from Fort AVashington to break the power of the Miami confederacy.
On the night of November 3d he reached a point nearly a hundred miles
north, of Fort Washington, and encamped on one of the upper tribu-
taries of the Wabash, in what is now the south-west angle of Mercer
county, Ohio. On the following morning at sunrise his camp was sud-
denly assailed by more than two thousand warriors, led by Little Turtle
and several American renegades who had joined the Indians. After a
terrible battle of three hours' duration, St. Clair was completely defeated,
with a loss of fully half his men. The fugitive militia retreated pre-
WASHINGTON'S ADMINISTRATION. SGT
cipitately to Fort Washington, where they arrived four days after the
battle. The news of the disaster spread gloom and sorrow throughout
the land. When the tidings reached Philadelphia the government
was for a while in consternation. For once the benignant spirit of
Washington gave way to wrath. "jHere," said he in a tempest of
indignation, — " here, in this very room, I took leave of General St.
Clair. I wished him success and honor. I said to him, ' You have
careful instructions from the secretary of war, and I myself will add
one word — beware of a surprise. You know how the Indians fight us.
Beware of a surprise !' He went oif with that, my last warning,
ringing in his ears. And yet he has suffered that army to be cut to-
pieces, hacked, butchered, tomahawked by a surprise, — the very thing
I guarded him against ! How can he answer to his country ? The
blood of the slain is upon him, — the curse of widows and orphans ! "
Mr. Lear, the secretary, in whose presence this storm of wrath burst
forth, sat speechless. Presently Washington grew silent. "What I
have uttered must not go beyond this room," said he in a manner of
great seriousness. Another pause of several minutes ensued, and then
he continued in a low and solemn tone : " I looked at the despatches-
hastily and did not note all the, particulars. General St. Clair shall
have justice. I will receive him without displeasure, — he shall have
full justice." Notwithstanding his exculpation by a committee of Con-
gress, poor St. Clair, overwhelmed with censures and reproaches,,
resigned his command and was superseded by General Wayne, whom
the people had named Mad Anthony.
The population of the Territory of Kentucky had now reached
seventy-three thousand. Only seventeen years before, Daniel Boone,
the hardy hunter of North Carolina, had settled with his companions
at Boonesborough. Harrodsburg and Lexington were founded about
the same time. During the Revolution the pioneers were constantly
beset by the savages. After the expedition of General Clarke^ in
1779, the frontier was more secure; and in the years following the-
treaty thousands of immigrants came annually. In the mean time,
Virginia had relinquished her claim to the territory; and on the 1st
of June, 1792, Kentucky was admitted into the Union. At the presi-
dential election, held in the autumn of the same year, Washington was
again unanimously chosen; as Vice-President, John Adams was also
re-elected.
During Washington's second administration the country was
greatly troubled in its relations with foreign governments. Europe
was in an uproar. The French Revolution of 1789 was still running.
3(58 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
its dreadful course. After three years of unparalleled excesses, the Ja-
cobins of France had beheaded the king and abolished the monarchy.
Citizen Genet was sent by the new French republic as minister to the
United States. On his arrival at Charleston, and on his way to Phil-
adelphia, he was greeted with unbounded enthusiasm. Taking advan-
tao-e of his popularity, the ambassador began to abuse his authority,
fitted out privateers to prey on the commerce of Great Britain, planned
expeditions against Louisiana, and, although the President had already
issued a proclamation of neutrality, demanded an alliance with the
government. Washington and the cabinet firmly refused; and the au-
dacious minister threatened to appeal to the people. In this outrageous
conduct he was sustained and encouraged by the anti-Federal party,
and for a while the government was endangered. But Washington
stood unmoved, declared the course of the French minister an insult
to the sovereignty of the United States, and demanded his recall. The
republican authorities of France heeded the demand, and Genet was
superseded by M. Fouchet.
The President was also much embarrassed by dissensions in his cab-
inet. From the beginning of his first official term the secretaries of
state and the treasury had maintained towards each other an attitude
■ of constant hostility. They had gradually become the heads of rival
parties in the government. Hamilton's financial measures were at-
tacked with vehement animosity by Jefferson ; and the policy of the
latter in his relations and duties as secretary of foreign affairs was the
subject of much bitter criticism from the former's scathing pen. The
breach between the rivals grew wider and wider. Washington's influ-
ence was barely sufficient to prevent the breaking up of his cabinet.
So great were the abilities and so valuable the experience of the two
secretaries that the services of neither could be spared without serious
detriment to the government. Both officers were patriots, and both
had insisted on Washington's reelection to the Presidency. After that
event, however, Jefferson, in January of 1794, resigned his office and
retired to private life at Monticello. A year later Hamilton also re-
tired from the cabinet and was succeeded by Oliver Wolcott of Con-
necticut.
During the summer and autumn of 1794 the country was much
disturbed by a difficulty in Western Pennsylvania known as the whisky
insurrection. Hoping to improve the revenues of the government, Con-
gress had, three years previously, imposed a tax on all ardent spirits dis-
tilled in the United States. While Genet was at Philadelphia, he and
his partisans incited the people of the distilling regions to resist the tax-
WASHINGTON'S ADMINISTRATION. 36'J
collectors. The disaffected rose in arms. Washington issued two proc-
lamations, warning the insurgents to disperse ; but instead of obeying,
they fired upon and captured the officers of the government. The Presi-
dent then ordered General Henry Lee to enter the rebellious district with
a sufficient force to restore order and enforce the law. When the troops
reached the scene of the disturbance, the rioters had already scattered.
The insurrection was a political rather than a social outbreak : the anti-
Federalists were in a majority in the distilling region, and the whisky-tax
was a measure of the Federal party.
Meanwhile, General Wayne had broken the Miami confederacy.
In the fall of 1793 he entered the Indian country with a force of three
thousand men. Beaching the scene of St. Clair's defeat, he built a
stockade named Fort Recovery, and then pressed on to the junction of
the Au Glaize and the Maumee, in Williams county, Ohio. Here he
built and garrisoned Fort Defiance. Descending the Maumee to the
rapids, he sent proposals of peace to the Indians, who were in council but
a few miles distant. Little Turtle, more wise than the other chiefs,
w^ould have made a treaty ; but the majority were for battle. On the
20th of August Wayne marched against the savages, overtook them
where the present town of Waynesfield stands, and routed them with ter-
rible losses. The relentless general then compelled the humbled chief-
tains to purchase peace by ceding to the United States all the territory
east of a line drawn from Fort Recovery to the mouth of the Great
Miami River. This was the last service of General Wayne. Re-
maining for a while in the Indian country, he embarked on Lake
Erie to return to Philadelphia. In December of 1796 he died on
board the vessel, and was buried at Presque Isle.
The conduct of Great Britain toward the United States became as
arrogant as that of France was impudent. In November of 1793 George
III. issued secret instructions to British privateers to seize all neutral
vessels that might be found trading in the French West Indies. The
United States had no notification of this high-handed measure; and
American commerce to the value of many millions of dollars was swept
from the sea by a process differing in nothing from highway robbery.
But for the temperate spirit of the government the country would have
been at once plunged into war. Prudence prevailed over passion ; and
in May of 1794 Chief-Justice Jay was sent as envoy extraordinary to
demand redress of the British government. Contrary to expectation,
his mission was successful ; and in the following November an honor-
able treaty was concluded. The terms of settlement, however, were
-exceedingly distasteful to the partisans of France in America, and they
24
370 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
determined to prevent its ratification. Every argument and motive
which ingenuity or prejudice could supply was eagerly paraded before
the people to excite their discontent. Public meetings were held and
excited orators harangued the multitudes. In New York a copy of
the treaty was burned before the governor's mansion. In Philadel-
phia there was a similar proceeding ; and the whole country was in
an uproar. Washington, however, believing the treaty to be just in
its main provisions, and earnestly desiring that war might be avoided^
favored ratification. The majority in the Senate remained unmoved,
and finally in the latter part of June, 1795, the terms of settlement
were duly ratified, and signed by the President. It was specified in
the treaty that Great Britain should make ample reparation for the
injuries done by her privateers, and surrender to the United States
certain AVestern posts which until now had been held by English gar-
risons. Thus was the threatened war averted.
In October of 1795 the boundary between the United States and
Louisiana was settled by a treaty with Spain. The latter country at the
same time guaranteed to the Americans the free navigation of the ]Mis-
sissippi. Less honorable was the treaty made with the kingdom of
Algiers. For a long time Algerine pirates had infested the Mediter-
ranean, preying upon the commerce of civilized nations; and those
nations, in order to purchase exemption from such ravages, had adopted
the ruinous policy of paying the dcy of Algiers an annual tribute. In
consideration of the tribute the dey agreed that his pirate ships should
confine themselves to the Mediterranean, and should not attack the vessels
of such nations as made the payment. Now, however, with the purpose
of injuring France, Great Britain winked at an agreement with the dey
by which the Algerine sea-robbers were turned loose on the Atlantic.
By their depredations American commerce suffered greatly ; and the
government of the United States was obliged to purchase safety by
paying the shameful tribute.
In the summer of 1796, Tennessee, the third new State, was
organized and admitted into the Union. Six years previously North
Carolina had surrendered her claims to the territory, which at that time
contained a population of thirty-five thoasand ; and within five years the
number was more than doubled. The first inliabitants of Tennessee were
of that hardy race of pioneers to whom the perils of the wilderness are as
nothing provided the wilderness is free. By the addition of the two
States south-Avest of the Ohio more than eighty-three thousand square
miles of territory were brought under the dominion of civilization.
Nothing in history is more surprising than the ascendency which
WASHINGTON'S ADMINISTRATION. 371
Washina-ton, unto the end of his official career, continued to exercise
over the minds of his countrymen. In the House of Representatives,
during the hist two sessions, there had been a clear majority against
him and his policy ; and yet the House continued its support of his
measures. Even the provisions necessary to carry into effect the hated
treaty with Great Britain were made by that body, though the vote
was close. So powerful were the President's views in determining
the actions of the people that Jefferson, writing to Monroe at Paris,
said: "Congress has adjourned. You will see by their proceedings
the truth of what I always told you, namely, that one man outweighs
them all in influence over the people, who support his judgment against
their own and that of their representatives. Republicanism resigns the
vessel to its pilot."
Washington was solicited to become a candidate for a third elec-
tion to the presidency ; but he would not. His resolution had already
been made to end his public career. With the Father of his Country
the evening of life drew on, and rest was necessary. Accordingly, in
September of 1796, he issued to the people of the United States his
Farewell Address — a document crowded Avith precepts of political
wisdom, prudent counsels, and chastened patriotism."^ As soon as the
President's determination was made knoAvn the political parties mar-
shaled their forces and put forward their champions, John Adams ap-
pearing as the candidate of the Federal, and Thomas Jefferson of the
anti-Federal party. Antagonism to the Constitution, which had thus
far been the chief question between the parties, now gave place to
another issue — whether it was the true policy of the United States to
enter into intimate relations with the republic of France. The anti-
Federalists said, Yes ! that all republics have a common end, and that
Great Britain was the enemy of them all. The Federalists said. No !
that the American republic must mark out an independent course
among the nations, and avoid all foreign alliances. On that issue Mr.
Adams was elected, but Mr. Jefferson, having the next highest num-
ber of votes, became Vice-President ; for according to the old provis-
ion of the Constitution, the person who stood second on the list was
declared the second officer in the government.
*See Appendix G
372
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER XLVII.
ADAMS'S ADMINISTRATION, 1797-1801.
JOHN ADAMS, second President of the United States, was born in
the town of Braintree, Massachusetts, October 19th, 1735. He was a
great-grandson of that Henry Adams who, emigrating from Great Brit-
ain in 1640, founded in America a family made famous by many illus-
trious names. Eight
sons of the elder
Adams settled around
Massachusetts Bay,
the grandfather of the
President in that part
of Braintree after-
wards called Quincy,
The father of John
Adams was a Puritan
deacon, a selectman
of the town, a farmer
of small means, and a
.shoemaker. The son
received a classical ed-
ucation, being gradu-
ated at the a2;e of
twenty from Harvard
College. For a while
he taught school, but
finding that vocation
to be, as he expressed
it, a school of affliction, he turned his attention to the study of law. In
this profession he soon became eminent, removed to Boston, engaged
with great zeal in the controversy with the mother country, and was
quickly recognized as an able leader of public opinion. From this
time forth his services were in constant demand both in his native
State and in the several colonial Congresses. He was a member of
the celebrated committee appointed to draft the Declaration of Inde-
pendence, and in the debates on that instrument was its chief defender.
:^^^^''m^''
JOHN ADAxMS.
ADAMS'S ADMINISTRATION. 373
During the last years of the Revolution he served his country as
ambassador to France, Holland, and Great Britain, being the first
minister to that country after the recognition of American independ-
ence. From this important station he returned in 1788, and was soon
afterwards elected Vice-President under the new frame of government.
After serving in this office for eight years, he was chosen as the suc-
cessor of Washington.
On the 4th of March, 1797, President Adams was inaugurated.
From the beginning his administration was embarrassed by a power-
ful and well-organized opposition. Adet, the French minister, made
inflammatory appeals to the people, and urged the government to
conclude a league with France against Great Britain. When the
President and Congress stood firmly on the doctrine of neutrality,
the French Directory grew insolent, and began to demand an alli-
ance. The treaty which Mr. Jay had concluded with England was
especially complained of by the partisans of France. On the 10th
of March the Directory issued instructions to French men-of-war to
assail the commerce of the United States. Soon afterward Mr. Pinck-
ney, the American minister, was ordered to leave the territory of
France.
These proceedings were equivalent to a declaration of war. The
President convened Congress in extraordinary session, and measures
were devised for repelling the aggressions of the French. Elbridge
Gerry and John Marshall were directed to join Mr. Pinckney in a
final effort for a peaceable adjustment of the difficulties. But the
effi^rt was fruitless. The Directory of France refused to receive the
ambassadors except upon condition that they wovild pledge the pay-
ment into the French treasury of a quarter of a million of dollars.
Pinckney answered with the declaration that the United States had
millions for defence, hut not a cent for tribute. The envoys were then
ordered to leave the country ; but Gerry, who was an anti-Federalist,
was permitted to remain. These events occupied the summer and fall
of 1797.
In the beginning of the next year an act was passed by Con-
gress completing the organization of the army. Washington was called
from the retirement of his old age and appointed commander-in-chief.
Hamilton was chosen first major-general. A navy of six frigates, be-
sides privateers, had been provided for at the session of the previous
year; and a national loan had been authorized. The patriotism of
the people was thoroughly aroused ; the treaties with France were de-
clared void, and vigorous preparations were made for the impending
374 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
■war. The American frigates put to sea, and in the summer and fall
of 1799 did good service for the commerce of the country. Commo-
dore Truxtun, in the ship Constellation, won distinguished honors. On
the 9th of February, while cruising in the West Indies, he attacked
the Insurgent, a French man-of-war carrying forty guns and more than
four hundred seamen. A desperate engagement ensued ; and Truxtun,
though inferior in cannons and men, gained a complete victory. A
year later he overtook another frigate, called the Vengeance, and after
a five hours' battle in the night would have captured his antagonist
but for a storm and the darkness. These events added greatly to the
renown of the American flag.
The organization of the provisional army was soon completed.
The commander-in-chief repaired to Philadelphia and remained five
weeks with Generals Hamilton and Pinckney, superintending the
work. Such measures were taken as were deemed adequate to the
defence of the nation, and then Washington retired to Mount Ver-
non, leaving the greater part of the responsibility to be borne by
Hamilton. The news of these warlike proceedings was soon carried
to France, and the shrewd Talleyrand, minister of foreign affairs for
the French republic, seeing that his dismissal of Mr. Monroe and
General Pinckney had given mortal oifence to the American people,
managed to signify to Vans Murray, ambassador of the United States
to Holland, that if President Adams would send another minister to
Paris he would be cordially received. Murray immediately transmit-
ted this hint to the President, who caught eagerly at this opportunity
to extricate the country from apprehended war. On the 18th of Feb-
ruary he transmitted a message to the Senate nominating Mr. Murray
himself as minister plenipotentiary to the French republic. The nom-
ination was confirmed, and the ambassador was authorized to proceed at
once to France. It was also agreed by the Senate that two other per-
sons should be added to the embassy ; and Oliver Ellsworth and Will-
iam R, Davie were accordingly commissioned to proceed to Amsterdam
and join Murray in his important mission to the French capital.
Meanwhile, Napoleon Bonaparte had overthrown the Directory
of France and made himself first consul of the republic. More wise
and politic than his associates in the government, he immediately
sought peace with the the United States. For he saw clearly enough
that the impending war would, if prosecuted, inevitably result in an
alliance between America and England — a thing most unfavorable to
the interests of France. He was also confident that peaceful overtures
on his part Avould be met with favor. The three American ambassa-
ADAMS'S ADMINISTRATION. S75
-dors — Murray, Ellsworth and Davie — reached Paris, after many delays,
in the beginning of March, 1800. Negotiations were at once opened,
and, in the following September, were happily terminated with a treaty
of peace. In all his relations with the United States Napoleon acted the
part of a consistent and honorable ruler.
Before the war-cloud was scattered America was called to mourn
the loss of Washington. On the 14th of December, 1799, after an illness
of only a day, the venerated chieftain passed from among the living. All
hearts were touched with sorrow. The people put on the garb of mourn-
ing. Congress went in funeral procession to the German Lutheran church,
where General Henry Lee, the personal friend of Washington, delivered
a touching and eloquent oration. Throughout the civilized world the
memory of the great dead was honored with appropriate ceremonies. To
the legions of France the event was announced by Bonaparte, who paid
a beautiful tribute to the virtues of " the warrior, the legislator and the
citizen without reproach." As the body of Washington was laid in the
sepulchre, the voice of partisan malignity that had not hesitated to assail
his name was hushed into everlasting silence ; and the world with un-
covered head agreed with Lord Byron in declaring the illustrious dead t®
have been among warriors, statesmen and patriots
" The first, the last, the best,
The Cincinnatus of the West."
The administration of Adams and the eighteenth century drew to a
dose together. In spite of domestic dissensions and foreign alarms, the
new republic was growing strong and influential. The census of 1800
showed that the population of the country, including the black men, had
increased to over five millions. The seventy-five post-offices reported by
the census of 1790 had been multiplied to nine hundred and three ; the
exports of the United States had grown from twenty millions to nearly
seventy-one millions of dollars. The permanency of the Constitution as
the supreme law of the land was now cheerfully recognized. In Decem-
ber of 1800 Congress for the first time assembled in Washington city, the
new capital of the nation. Virginia and Maryland had ceded to the
United States the District of Columbia, a tract ten miles square lying on
both sides of the Potomac ; but the part given by Virginia was afterward
re-ceded to that State. The city which was designed as the seat of govern-
ment was laid out in 1792; and in 1800 the population numbered be-
tween eight and nine thousand.
With prudent management and unanimity the Federal party might
have retained control of the government. But there were dissensions in
376 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Mr. Adams's cabinet. Much of the recent legislation of Congress had
been unwise and unpopular. The alien law, by which the President wa&
authorized to send out of the country any foreigners whose presence
should be considered prejudicial to the interests of the United States, was-
specially odious. The sedition law, which punished with fine and im-
prisonment the freedom of speech and of the press when directed abusively
against the government, was denounced by the opposition as an act of
tyranny. Partisan excitement ran high. Mr. Adams and Mr. Charles
C. Pinckney were put forward as the candidates of the Federalists, and
Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr of the Republicans or Democrats. The
latter were triumphant. In the electoral college Jefferson and Burr each
received seventy-three votes; Adams, sixty-five; and Pinckney, sixty-four.
In order to decide between the Democratic candidates, the election was re-
ferred to the House of Representatives. After thirty-five ballotings, the
choice fell on Jefferson ; and Burr, who was now second on the list, was
declared Vice-President. After controlling the government for twelve
years, the Federal party passed from power, never to be restored.
CHAPTER XLVIII.
JEFFERSON'S ADMINISTRATION, 1801-1809.
THOMAS JEFFERSON was born in the county of Albemarle,.
Virginia, on the 2d of April, 1743. Of his ancestry, history has
preserved no record other than the name of his father. Colonel Peter
Jefferson, a man noted for native abilities and force of character. The
son found excellent advantages of early training in the private school
of an exiled Scottish clergyman, and afterwards completed his educa-
tion at William and Mary College. He then entered upon the study
of law, and soon rose to distinction. Like his predecessor in the pres-
idential office, he became in his early manhood deeply absorbed in the
controversy with the mother country, and by his radical views in the
House of Buro-esses contributed much to fix forever the sentiments of
that body against the arbitrary measures of the English ministry.
From the councils of his native State Jefferson was soon called
to the councils of the nation. His coming was anxiously awaited in
the famous Congress of 1776 ; for his fame as a thinker and a demo-
JEFFERSON'S ADMINISTRATION.
377
crat had preceded him. To his pen and brain the almost exclusive
authorship of the great Declaration must be awarded. During the
struggles of the Revolution he was among the most distinguished and
uncompromising of the patriot leaders. After the war was over, he?
was sent abroad with
Adams and Franklin
to negotiate treaties
of amity and com-
merce with the Eu-
ropean nations, and
was then appointed
minister plenipoten-
tiary of the new
Republic to France.
From this high trust
he was recalled to
become secretary of
state under Wash-
ington; in 1796 was
elected Vice - Presi -
dent, and in 1800
President of the
United States. The
American decimal
system of coinage,
the statute for relig-
ious freedom, the Declaration of Independence, the University of
Virginia, and the presidency of the Union are the immutable foun-
dations of his fame.
At the beginning of his administration Mr. Jefferson transferred
the chief offices of the government to members of the Democratic
party. This policy had in some measure been adopted by his prede-
cessor; but the principle was now made universal. Such action was
justified by the adherents of the President on the ground that the
affairs of a republic will be best administered when the officers hold
the same political sentiments. One of the first acts of Congress was
to abolish the system of internal revenues. The unpopular laws against
foreigners and the freedom of the press were also repealed. But the
territorial legislation of Jefferson's first term was most important of
all.
In the year 1800 a line was drawn through the North-west
THOMAS JEFFERSON.
378 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Territory from the mouth of the Great Miami River to Fort Recovery-j
and thence to Canada. Two years afterward the country east of this
line was erected into the State of Ohio and admitted into the Union.
The portion west of the line, embracing the present States of Indi-
ana, Illinois, Wisconsin and a part of Michigan, was organized under
the name of the Indiana Teeeitory. Yincennes was the capital ;
and General William Henry Harrison received the appointment of
governor. About the same time the organization of the Mississippi
Teeeitoey, extending from the western limits of Georgia to the great
river, was completed. Thus another grand and fertile district of a
hundred thousand square miles was reclaimed from barbarism.
More important still was the purchase of Louisiana. In 1800
Napoleon had compelled Spain to make a secret cession of this vast
territory to France. The First Consul then prepared to send an army
to New Orleans for the purpose of establishing his authority. But
the government of the United States remonstrated against such a pro-
ceeding ; France was threatened with multiplied wars at home ; and
Bonaparte, seeing the difficulty of maintaining a colonial empire at so
great a distance, authorized his minister to dispose of Louisiana by
sale. The President appointed Mr. Livingston and James Monroe
to negotiate the purchase. On the 30th of April, 1803, the terms of
transfer were agreed on by the agents of the two nations ; and for the
sum of eleven million two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, Louisi-
ana was ceded to the United States.* In another convention, which
was signed on the same day, it was agreed that the government of
the United States should assume the payment of certain debts due
from France to American citizens ; but the sum thus assumed should
not, inclusive of interest, exceed three million seven hundred and fifty
thousand dollars. Thus did the vast domain west of the Mississippi,
embracing an area of more than a million square miles, pass under
the dominion of the United States.
Four nations — France, the United States, Great Britain, and
Spain — were concerned in determining the boundaries of the ceded
territory. In regard to the eastern limit, all were agreed that it
should be the Mississippi from its source to the thirty-first parallel
of latitude. On the south-east the boundary claimed by the United
States, Great Britain, and France, was the thirty-first parallel from
the Mississippi to the Appalachicola, and down that river to the Gulf,
* BoTiai)arte accepted in payment six per cent, bonds of tlie United States, payable
fifteen years after date. He also agreed not to sell the bonds at such a price aa would
•degrade the credit of the American government.
JEFFERSON'S ADMINISTRATION. 379
From this line, however, Spain dissented, claiming the Iberville and
Lakes Maurepas and Pontchartrain as the true limit between Louisi-
ana and her possessions in West Florida; but she was obliged, after
fruitlessly protesting, to yield to the decision of her rivals. On the
south, by the consent of all, the boundary was the Gulf of Mexico as
far west as the mouth of the Sabine. The south-western limit was
established along the last named river as far as the thirty-first paral-'
lei ; thence due north to Red River ; up that stream to the one-hun-
dredth meridian from Greenwich ; thence north again to the Arkan-
sas; thence with that river to the mountains; and thence north with
the mountain chain to the forty-second parallel of latitude. Thus far
.all four of the nations were agreed. But the United States, Great
Britain, and France — again coinciding — claimed the extension of the
boundary along the forty-second parallel to the Pacific Ocean ; and to
this extension Spain, for several years, refused her assent; but in the
treaty of 1819 her objections were formally withdrawn. In fixing the
northern boundary only the United States and Great Britain were
concerned ; and the forty-ninth parallel from the Lake of the Woods
to the Pacific was established as the international line.*
The purchase of Louisiana was the greatest event of Jefferson's
administration. Out of the southern portion of the new acquisition
the Territory of Orleans was organized, with the same limits as
the present State of Louisiana ; the rest of the vast tract continued
to be called the Territory of Louisiana. The possession of the
Mississippi was no longer a matter of dispute. Very justly did Mr.
Livingston say to the French minister as they arose from signing the
treaty: "We have lived long, but this is the noblest work of our
^whole lives."
Two years previous to these events John Marshall had been
nominated and confirmed as chief-justice of the United States. His
appointment marks an epoch in the history of the country. In the
colonial times the English constitution and common law had pre-
* See Map VII. The discussion of the boundaries of Louisiana is thus fully given
because of the many statements, needlessly contradictory, which have been made on
the subject. Between the years 1803 and 1819 there was some ground for controversy,
but since the latter date none whatever — except as to the northern line. For all the
facts tending to elucidate the subject, see American State Papers; topics : Treaty of
Paris, 1763 ; Definitive Treaty between Great Britain and the United States, 1783 ; Text
•of the Louisiana Cession, 1803; Boundary Conventions between the United States and
■Great Britain, 1818 and 1846; Treaty of Washington, 1819. See also Walker's Statis-
'lical Atlas of the United States; subject: Areas and Political Divisions, pp. 2 and 3; and
tthe American Cyclopoedia ; article : Louisiana.
380
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
vailed in America, and judicial decisions were based exclusively on
precedents established in English courts. When, in 1789, the new
republic was organized, it became necessary to modify to a certain
extent the principles of jurisprudence and to adapt them to the al-
tered theory of gov-
ernment. In some
measure this great
work was undertak-
en by Chief-Justice
Jay ; but he was a
great statesman ra-
ther than a great
judge. It remained
for Chief- Justice
Marshall to estab-
lish on a firm and
enduring basis the
noble structure of
American law. For
thirty-five years he
remained in his high
office, bequeathing
to after times a great
number of valuable
decisions, in which
the principles of the
jurisprudence of the United States are set forth with unvarying clear-
ness and invincible logic.
The Mediterranean pirates still annoyed American merchantmen.
All of the Barbary States — as the Moorish kingdoms of Northern Af-
rica are called — had adopted the plan of extorting annual tributes
from the European nations. The emperors of Morocco, Algiers and
Tripoli became especially arrogant. In 1803 the government of the
United States despatched Commodore Preble to tlie Mediterranean to
protect American commerce and punish the hostile powers. The ar-
mament proceeded first against Morocco; but the frigate Philadelphia,
commanded by Captain Bainbridgc, was sent directly to Tripoli. AVhen
nearing his destination, Bainbridge gave chase to a pirate which fled
for safety to the batteries of the harbor. The Philadelphia, in close
pursuit, ran upon a reef of rocks near the shore, became unmanage-
able, and was captured by the Tripolitaus. The crew and officers
CimCF-JUSTICE MARSHALL.
JEFFERSON'S ADMINISTRATION. 381
were taken ; the latter were treated with some respect, but the former
were enslaved. The emperor Yusef and his barbarous subjects were
greatly elated at their unexpected success.
In the following February Captain Decatur recaptured the Phil-
adelphia in a marvelous manner. Sailing from Sicily in a small ves-
sel called the Intrepid, he came at nightfall in sight of the harbor of
Tripoli, where the Philadelphia was moored. The Intrepid, being a
Moorish ship which the American fleet had captured, was either un-
seen or unsuspected by the Tripolitans. As darkness settled on the
sea, Decatur steered his course into the harbor, slipped alongside of
the Philadelphia, lashed the two ships together, sprang on deck with
his daring crew of only seventy-four men, and killed or drove over-
board every Moor on the vessel. In a moment the frigate was fired,
for it was the purpose to destroy her; then Decatur and his men, es-
caping from the flames, returned to the Intrepid and sailed out of the
harbor amid a storm of balls from the Tripolitan batteries. Not a
man of Decatur's gallant band was lost, and only four were wounded.
In the last of Julv, 1804, Commodore Preble arrived with his
fleet at Tripoli and began a blockade and siege which lasted till the
following spring. The town was frequently bombarded, and several
Moorish vessels were destroyed; but not even the pounding- of Amer-
ican cannon-balls was sufficient to bring Yusef to terms. In the mean-
time, however, it was ascertained that the services of Hamet, Yusef 's
elder brother, the deposed sovereign of Tripoli, might be secured to
aid in reducing the barbarians to submission. Hamet was at this time
in Upper Egypt, commanding an army of Mamelukes in a war against
the Turks. To him General William Eaton, the American consul at
Tunis, was despatched with proposals of an alliance against the usurp-
ing Yusef. Hamet eagerly accepted the overture, and furnished Gen-
eral Eaton with a fine body of Arab cavalry and seventy Greek soldiers.
AVith this force the American commander set out from Alexandria on
the 5th of March, 1805. He traversed the Desert of Barca for a thou-
sand miles, and on the 25th of April reached Derne, one of Yusef 's
eastern sea-ports. Yusef himself was already approaching with an
army ; and General Eaton found it necessary to storm the town. A
division of the American fleet arrived in the harbor at the fortunate
moment and aided in the work. The place was gallantly carried.
The assaulting column was made up of Arab cavalry, Greek infantry,
Tripolitan rebels, and American sailors serving on land ! The Stars
and Stripes never before or since waved over so motley an assem-
blage ! Yusef, alarmed at the dangers which menaced him by sea
882 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and land, made hasty overtures for peace. His offers were accepted by ]\Ir.
Lear, the American consul-general for the Barbary States ; and a treaty
was concluded on the 4th of June, 1805.* For several years thereafter
the flag of the United States was respected in the Mediterranean.
In the summer of 1804 the country was shocked by the intelligence
that Vice-President Burr had killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel. As
the fii-st term of Mr. Jefferson drew to a close. Burr foresaw that the
President would be renominated, and that he himself would not be re-
nominated. Still, he had his eye on the presidency, and was determined
not to be baffled. He therefore, while holding the office of Vice-Presi-
dent, became a candidate for governor of New York. From that posi-
tion he would pass to the presidency at the close of Jefferson's second
term. But Hamilton's powerful influence in New York prevented Burr's
election ; and his presidential ambition received a stunning blow. From
that day he determined to kill the man whom he pretended to regard as
the destroyer of his hopes. He accordingly sought a quarrel with Hamil-
ton ; challenged him ; met him at Weehawken, opposite New York, on
the morning of the 11th of July, and deliberately murdered him; for
Hamilton had tried to avoid the challenge, and when face to face with
his antao-onist refused to fire. Thus under the savac:e and abominable
custom of dueling the brightest intellect in America was put out in
darkness.
In the autumn of 1804 Jefferson was re-elected President. For
Vice-President George Clinton of New York was chosen in place of
Burr. In the following year that part of the North-western Territory
called Wayne county was organized under a separate territorial govern-
ment with the name of Michigan. In the same spring, Captains Lewis
and Clarke, acting under orders of the President, set out from the falls
of the Missouri River with a party of thirty-five soldiers and hunters to
cross the Rocky Mountains and explore Oregon. Not until November
did they reach their destination. For two years, through forests of gigantic
pines, along the banks of unknown rivers and down to the shores of the
Pacific, did they continue their explorations. After wandering among
unheard-of tribes of barbarians, encountering grizzly bears more ferocious
than Bengal tigers, escaping perils by forest and flood, and traversing a
route of six thousand miles, the hardy adventurers, with the loss of but
one man, returned to civilization, bringing new ideas of the vast domains
of the West.
* It is a matter of astonishment that Lear agreed to pay Yusef sixty thousand dollars
for the liberation of American slaves: their liberation ought to have been compelled-^
and might have been if Lear had said so.
JEFFERSON'S jlDMINISTRATION. 383
After the death of Hamilton, Burr fled from popular indignation
and sought refuge in the South. At the opening of the next session of
Congress he returned to the capital, and presided over the Senate until
the expiration of his term of office. Then he delivered his valedictory,
Avent to the "West, and, after traveling through several States, took up his
residence with an Irish exile named Harman Blannerhassett, who had
laid out an estate and built a splendid mansion on an island in the Ohio,
just below the mouth of the Muskingum. Here Burr made a -wicked
and treasonable scheme against the peace and happiness of the country.
His plan was to raise a sufficient military force, invade Mexico, wrest that
country from the Spaniards, detach the Western and Southern States from
the Union, make himself dictator of a South-western empire, and perhaps
subvert the government of the United States. For two years he labored
to perfect his plans. But his purposes were suspected. In accordance
with a proclamation of the President, the military preparations at Blan-
nerhassett's Island v/ere broken up ; and in February of 1807 Burr him-
self was arrested in Alabama and taken to Richmond to be tried on a
charge of treason. Chief-Justice Marshall presided at the trial, and Burr
conducted his own defence. The verdict was, " Not guilty, for want of
sufficient j)roof " But his escape was so narrow that under an assumed
name he fled from the country. Returning a few years afterward, he re-
sumed the practice of law in JSTew York, lived to extreme old age, and
died alone in abject poverty.
During Jeiferson's second administration the country was con-
stantly agitated by the aggressions of the British navy on American com-
merce. England and France were engaged in deadly and continuous war.
In order to cripple the resources of their enemy, the British authorities
struck blow after blow against the trade between France and foreign
nations; and Napoleon retaliated Math equal energy and vindictiveness
against the commerce of Great Britain. The measures adopted by the
two powers took the form of blockade — that is, the surrounding of each
other's ports with men-of-war to prevent the ingress and egress of neutral
ships. By such means the commerce of the United States, which had
grown vast and valuable while the European nations were fighting, was
greatly injured and. distressed.
In May of 1806 England declared the whole coast of France from
Brest to the Elbe to be in a state of blockade. Neutral nations had no
warning. Many American vessels, approaching the French ports, were
seized and condemned as prizes ; all this, too, while the harbors of France
were not actually, but only declared to be, blockaded. In the following
November Bonaparte issued a decree blockading the British isles. Again.
;384 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the unsuspecting merchantmen of the United States were subjected to
seizure^ this time by the cruisers of France. In January of the next
year the government of Great Britain retaliated by an act ^prohibiting
the French coasting-trade. Every one of these measures was in fla-
grant violations of the laws of nations. The belligerent powers had
iio right to take such steps toward each other; as to neutral States,
tiieir rights were utterly disregarded; and the nation that suffered
most was the United States.
In addition to these causes of complaint an old crime against
international law had, in the mean time, been revived by the Eng-
lish government, to the great distress of American commerce. At the
■outbreak of the French and Indian War George II. had issued an edict
forbidding the vessels of neutral nations to trade with the colonies of
France or the provinces of any other country with which Great Brit-
ain might be at war. The offences committed under the authority of
this arbitrary decree, which was known as the Rule of 1756, had
been greatly injurious to the commerce of the colonies, and during
Washington's administration had occasioned many complaints and re-
monstrances. But in June of 1801, in a treaty between Great Britain
and Russia, the former government assented to such a modification of
the Rule as rendered it comparatively harmless. The effect of this
modification was exceedingly beneficial to neutral nations, especially
to America. Between the years 1803 and 1806 the foreign carrying-
trade of the United States was increased nearly fivefold, while that of
England fell off in a nearly corresponding ratio. Vexed and morti-
fied at this result, and caring little for justice if the supremacy of the
British merchant-marine could be maintained, the ministry, in the
summer of 1805, revived the old edict in full force, and impudently
asserted that it was a part of the km of nations ! The result, as had
been clearly foreseen by the English lords of trade who contrived the
measure, was that American merchantmen trading largely with the
dependencies of France and Spain, were driven from the ocean, and
the commerce of the United States shrank suddenly into insignifi-
cance.
Finally Great Britain aggravated her injustice by a still more
arrogant and unwarrantable procedure. The English theory of citi-
zenship is, that whoever is born in England remains through life a
subject of the British Empire. The privilege of an Englishman to
expatriate himself— that is, the right to go abroad, to throw off his
allegiance to the British crown, and to assume the obligations of citi-
zenship in another nation — is absolutely denied. Under this iron rule
of " once an Englishman, always an Englishman," the British cruisers
JEFFERSON'S ADMINISTRATION. 385
■were from time to time authorized to search American vessels and to
take therefrom all persons suspected of being subjects of Great Brit-
ain. One of the chief objects had in view in this iniquitous business
was to prevent the emigration of the Irish to the United States. The
impulsive sons of the Emerald Isle, hearing of the free institutions and
boundless prospects of America, were flocking hither in great num-
bers, and something must be done to stop the movement. George Hi.
and his advisers therefore marshaled forth their despotic theory of cit-
izenship and set it up like a death's-head at every port of the British
Isles, Inasmuch as every Irishman or Scotchman who ventured on
board an American vessel would expose himself to the peril of seizure
and impressment, it was, with good reason, believed that not many
would take the fearful risk. And the apprehensions of the emigrants
were well founded ; for all those who had the misfortune to be over-
taken at sea were, without inquiry, impressed as marines in the Eng-
lish navy. To crowd the decks of their men-of-war with unwilling
recruits, torn from home and friends, was the end which the British
king and ministry were willing to reach at whatever sacrifice of na-
tional honor. Finally to these general wrongs was added a special act
of violence which kindled the indignation of the Americans to the
highest pitch.
On the 22d of June, 1807, a frigate, named the Chesapeake which
had just sailed out of the bay of the same name, was approached by a
British man-of-war, called the Leopard. The frigate was hailed ; Brit-
ish officers came on board as friends, and then, to the astonishment of
Commodore Barron, who commanded the Chesapeake, made a demand
to search the vessel for deserters. The demand was indignantly re-
fused and the ship cleared for action. But before the guns could be
gotten in readiness, the Leopard poured in several destructive broad-
sides and compelled a surrender. Four men were taken from the
captured ship, three of whom proved to be American citizens; the
fourth, who was an actual deserter, was tried by the British naval
officers and hanged. The government of Great Britain disavowed
the outrage of the Leopard, and promised reparation ; but the prom-
ise was never fulfilled.
The President at once issued a proclamation forbidding British
ships of war to enter the harbors of the United States. Still, there
was no reparation ; and on the 21st of December Congress passed the
celebrated Embargo Act. By its provisions all American vessels
were detained in the ports of the United States. The object was, by
cutting off commercial intercourse with France and Great Britain, to
•compel them to recognize the rights of American neutrality. But the
25
386
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
measure was of little avail; and after fourteen months the embargo-
act was repealed.* Meanwhile, in November of 1808, the British
government outdid all previous proceedings by issuing an " order in
council/' prohibiting all trade with France and her allies. And Napo-
leon, not to be outdone, issued his famous " Milan decree," forbidding
all commerce with England and her colonies. Between these outra-
geous acts of foreign nations and the American embargo, the com-
merce of the United States was well-nigh crushed out of existence.
While the country was distracted with these troubles Robert Ful-
ton was building the first steamboat. This event exercised a vast
influence on the fu-
ture development of
the nation. It was
of the first impor-
tance to the people
of the inland States
that their great riv-
ers should be enliv-
ened with rapid and
regular navigation.
This, without the ap-
plication of steam,
was impossible ; and
this Fulton success-
fully accomplished.
Indeed, the steam-
boat was the harbin-
ger of a new era in
civilization. Fulton
was an Irishman by
descent and a Penn-
sylvanian by birth. His education was meagre and imperfect. In
his boyhood he became a painter of miniatures at Philadelphia. His
friends sent him to London to receive instruction from Benjamin
West; but his tastes led him to the useful rather than to the fine
arts. From London he went to Paris, where he became acquainted
with Chancellor Livingston; and there he conceived the project of
applying steam to the purposes of navigation. Returning to New
York, he began the construction of a steamboat in East River. When
* The embargo act was the subject of mucli ridicule. The opponents of the measure
ppelling the word backward, called it the 0 Grab me act.
Koi5iii;T 1 ri.roN.
JEFFERSON'S ADMINISTRATION. 387
the ungainly craft was completed and brought around to the Jersey
side of the city, Fulton invited his friends to go on board and enjoy
a trip to Albany. It was the 2d of September, 1807. The incredu-
lous crowds stood staring on the shore. The Avord was given, and the
boat did not move. Fulton went below. Again the word was given,
and this time the boat moved. On the next day the happy company
reached Albany. For many years this first rude steamer, called the
Clermont, plied the Hudson. The old methods of river navigation
were revolutionized.
But the inventive genius of Fulton was by no means satisfied
with the great achievement. For years his thoughts had been busy
with another project which was considered by himself of greater value
and importance to the future interests of mankind than the steamboat.
His object was to produce some kind of an engine, so destructive to
ships as to banish naval warfare by making it possible for any one to
destroy the most formidable vessels which could be constructed. Finally
his plans were matured, and the result was the invention of that sub-
marine bomb, called the Torpedo, which has played so important a
part in the bay and river battles of modern times. This terrible ma-
chine is as distinctly and certainly the fruit of Fulton's brain as is
steam navigation itself; but the result has hardly met the expectations
of the inventor. As early as 1804, having completed the invention at
Paris, he oifered it successively to the governments of France, Hol-
land, and Great Britain ; but neither nation would accept the patron-
age of so dangerous an engine. In England a public demonstration
of its destructive eifects was given in the presence of British states-
men and men of science.* On the 15th of October, in Walmer Roads,
within sight of the residence of William Pitt, the Danish brig Doro-
thea, which had been given by the government for that purpose, was
blown to atoms on the first trial. But, although the success of the
torpedo was manifest, the English ministry refused to accept the in-
vention on the ground that Great Britain, already mistress of the seas,
did not need torpedoes, and that their use by other nations would de-
stroy her supremacy. Logic of habitual selfishness ! In 1807, and
again in 1810, Fulton offered his invention to the United States, and
in the latter year received an appropriation of five thousand dollars
for further experiments. Such was the terror inspired by the torpedo
that, although it was not very successfully used in the war that ensued,
the British cruisers were notably shy of the American coast, and many
a sea-port town was saved from destruction.
* Colonel Congreve, inventor of the " Congreve Kocket," was present on the occasiori.
388 EISTOBY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Jeiferson's administration drew to a close. The territorial area
of the United States had been vastly extended. Burr's wicked and
dangerous conspiracy had come to naught. Pioneers were pouring
into the valley of the Mississipj^i. Explorers had crossed the mount-
ains of the great West. The woods by the river-shores resounded
with the cry of steam. But the foreign relations of the United States
were troubled and gloomy. There were forebodings of war. The
President, following the example of "Washington, declined a third
election, and was succeeded in his high office by James Madison of
Virginia. For Vice-President George Clinton was re-elected.
CHAPTER XLIX.
MADISON'S ADMINISTRATION, AND WAR OF 1812.
JAMES MADISON, fourth President of the United States, was born
at King George, Virginia, on the 16th of March, 1751. He was
educated first in a private school and afterwards at Princeton College,
Avhere he was graduated at the age of twenty. Devoting himself to
the profession of the law, he found time for extensive reading and a
profound study of morals, metaphysics, and polite literature. From
these pursuits, so congenial to his disposition, his sterling patriotism
called him to take an active part in the struggles of the Revolution.
In the councils of his own State and afterwards in the Continental
Congress his influence was marked and powerful. But of all the pa-
triot leaders Madison had the calmest and least aggressive spirit. Not
by oratory and vehemence of passion, but by philosophy and cogent
argument, did he mould the opinions of his fellow-men. It was he
who, in 1786, secured the passage by the legislature of Virginia of
the resolution, suggested by Washington, calling for a convention of
the States at Annapolis — a work which resulted in the formation of
the Federal Constitution. Afterwards, with Hamilton and Jay, he
defended that great instrument in the Federalist; but with the new
division of parties, his views underwent a change and he joined him-
self with the Jeffersonian school of statesmeo. For eight years he
held the office of secretary of state ; and on the 4th of March, 1809,
was inaugurated as Jeffijrson's successor in the presidency. He owed
his election to the Democratic party, whose sympathy with France
and hostility to the policy of Great Britain were well known. Three
MADISON'S ADMINISTRATION.
389
days before the new administration came into power, the embargo act
was repealed by Congress ; bnt another measure was adopted instead,
called the non-intercourse act. By its terms American merchantmen
were allowed to go abroad, but were forbidden to trade with Great Brit-
ain. Mr. Erskine, the
British minister, now
gave notice that by
the 10th of June the
" orders in council,"
so far as they affect-
ed the United States,
should be repealed.
But the British gov-
ernment disavowed
the act of its agent;
and the orders stood
as before.
In the following
spring the emperor
of the French issued
a decree authoriz-
ing the seizure of all
American vessels
that might approach
the ports of France
or other harbors held by his troops,
year the hostile decree was reversed, and all restrictions on the com-
merce of the United States were removed. If Great Britain had acted
with equal liberality and justice, there would have been no further
complaint. But that government, with peculiar obstinacy, adhered to
its former measures, and sent ships of war to hover around the Amer-
ican ports and enforce the odious orders issued in the previous years.
It was only a question of time when such insolence would lead to re-
taliation and war.
The affairs of the two nations were fast approaching a crisis. It
became more and more apparent that the wrongs perpetrated by Great
Britain against the United States would have to be corrected by force
of arms. That England, after such a career of arrogance, would now
make reparation for the outrages committed by her navy was no longer
to be hoped for. The ministry of that same George III. with wliom
the colonies had struggled in the Revolution still directed the affair?
JAMES MADISON.
But in November of the same
390 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the kingdom ; from him, now grown old and insane, nothing was
to be expected. The government of the United States had fallen
completely under control of the party which sympathized with France,
Avhile the Federal party, from its leaning toward British interests and
institutions, grew weaker year by year. The American people, smart-
ing under the insults of Great Britain, had adopted the motto of Free
Trade and Sailors' Rights, and for that motto they had made up
their minds to fight. The elections, held between 1808 and 1811,
showed conclusively the drift of public opinion; the sentiment of the
country was that war was preferable to further humiliation and dis-
grace.
In the sj^ring of 1810 the third census of the United States was
completed. The population had increased to seven million two hun-
dred and forty thousand souls. The States now numbered seventeen,
and several new Territories were preparing for admission into the
Union. The resources of the nation were abundant; its institutions
deeply rooted and flourishing. But with the rapid march of civilization
westward the jealousy of the Red man was aroused, and Indiana Ter-
ritory was afflicted with an Indian war.
The Shawnees were the leading tribe in the country between the
Ohio and the Wabash. Their chief was the famous Tecumtha, a brave
and sagacious warrior; and with him was joined his brother Elkswa-
tawa, called the Prophet. The former was a man of real genius; the
latter, a vile impostor who pretended to have revelations from the
spirit-world. But they both worked together in a common cause; and
their plan was to unite all the nations of the North-west Territory in
a final effort to beat back the whites. When, therefore, in September
of 1809, Governor Harrison met the chiefs of several tribes at Fort
AYayne, and honorably purchased the Indian titles to three million
acres of land, Tecumtha refused to sign the treaty, and threatened
death to those who did. In the year that followed he visited the
nations as far south as Tennessee and exhorted them to lay aside their
sectional jealousies, in the hope of saving their hunting-grounds.
Governor Harrison from Vincennes, the capital of the Territory,
remonstrated with Tecumtha and the Prophet, held several conferences
Avith them, and warned them of what would follow from their proceed-
ings. Still, the leaders insisted that they would have back the lands
which had been ceded by the treaty of Fort Wayne. The governor
stood firm, sent for a few companies of soldiers and mustered the mi-
litia of the Territory. The Indians began to prowl through the Wa-
bash Valley, murdering and stealing. In order to secure the country
MADISON'S ADMINISTRATION. 391
and enforce the terms of the treaty, Harrison advanced up the river
to Terra Haute, built a fort which received his own name, passed on
to Montezuma, where another block-house was built, and then hastened
toward the town of the Prophet, at the mouth of the Tippecanoe.
When within a few miles of his destination, Harrison was met by In-
dian ambassadors, who asked for the appointment of a conference on
the following day. Their request was granted ; and the American
army encamped for the night. The place selected was a piece of high
ground covered with oaks. Burnet Creek skirted the encampment on
the west. Beyond that, as well as to the east of the oak grove, were
prairie marsh-lands covered with tall grass. Before daybreak on the
following morning, 7th of November, 1811, the treacherous savages,
numbering seven hundred, crept through the marshes, surrounded
Harrison's position and burst upon the camp like demons. But the
American militia were under arms in a moment, and fighting in the
darkness, held the Indians in check until daylight, and then routed
them in several vigorous charges. On the next day the Americans
burned the Prophet's town and soon afterward returned victorious to
Vincennes. Tecumtha was in the South at the time of the battle;
when he returned and found his people scattered and subdued, he re-
paired to Canada and joined the standard of the British.
Meanwhile, the powers of Great Britain and the United States
had come into conflict on the ocean. On the 16th of May Commo-
dore Rodgers, cruising in the American frigate President, hailed a
vessel off the coast of Virginia. Instead of a polite answer, to his
salutation, he received a cannon-ball in the mainmast. Other shots fol-
lowed, and Rodgers responded with a broadside, silencing the enemy's
guns. In the morning — for it was already dark — the hostile ship
was found to be the British sloop-of-war Little Belt. The vessel had
been severely though justly punished by the President, having eleven
men killed and twenty-one wounded. The event produced great ex-
citement throughout the country.
On the 4th of November, 1811, the twelfth Congress of the
United States assembled. In the body were many men of marked
ability and patriotism. John C. Calhoun of South Carolina now took
his seat as a member of the House of Representatives. Henry Clay,
already distinguished as a statesman, was chosen speaker. From the
first it was seen that war was inevitable. It was impossible for the
United States, knowing that more than six thousand American citi-
zens had been impressed into the British navy, to endure, without dis-
honor, further injury and insolence. Still, many hoped for peace; and
392 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the winter passed without decisive measures. The President himself
had no disposition and little capacity for war; and his various mes-
sages to Congress were marked as the productions of a ruler over-cau-
tious and timid. But not so with the fiery leaders of the Democracy
who supported the President's administration ; and notwithstanding
the opposition of the Federalists, the war-spirit fired the popular heart.
In the mean time a transaction was brought to light which cre-
ated intense excitement and roused the indignation of the whole
country. On the night of the 2d of February, 1812, an Irishman,
named John Henry, now a naturalized citizen of the United States,
called at the President's mansion and revealed to him the astounding
fact that the ministry of Great Britain, cooperating with Sir James
Craig, governor of Canada, had been engaged for some years in a trea-
sonable scheme to destroy the American Union! Henry bore a letter
from Governor Gerry of Massachusetts, and all the documents neces-
sary to prove the truth of his statements. As early as 1808 the atten-
tion of the Canadian governor had been called to certain published
articles written by Henry against republican governments; and the
latter was summoned to Montreal. From him Craig learned of the
intense hostility of the Federal party to the administration and of the
great distress of New England on account of the Embargo and other
restrictions on commerce. These facts were communicated to the
British ministry, and Sir James promised Henry an annual salary of
five thousand dollars to return to Boston and become the secret agent
of England and Canada.
The purpose of the conspirators was to aggravate the popular dis-
content of New England until the Eastern States should be induced
to secede from the Union and join themselves with Canada./ But
with the repeal of the Embargo and the subsidence of political excite-
ment, Henry found the depravity of his business only equaled by its
unprofitableness. The people of Massachusetts were in no humor to
be led into a rebellion. Sir James Craig died, and Henry, unsuc-
cessful and unpaid, went, in 1811, to London and presented his claim
for thirty thousand pounds to the English ministers. By them he was
well received ; but the payment of thirty thousand pounds for services
which had resulted in nothing was reckoned a serious matter; and
Henry was sent back to get whatever remuneration he could from Sir
George Prevost, the successor of Craig in the governorship of Canada.
Enraged at his treatment, the spy, instead of returning to Montreal,
sailed to Boston, and going thence to Washington divulged the whole
conspiracy to the President, surrendered his correspondence with
MADISON'S ADMINISTBATION. 393
Craig, and received therefor fifty thousand dollars out of the secret
service fund of the United States. The disclosure of this perfidious
business contributed greatly to consolidate public sentiment against
Great Britain and to strengthen the hands of the war party in the
government.
On the 4th of April, 1812, an act was passed by Congress laying
an embargo for ninety days on all British vessels within the jurisdic-
tion of the United States. But Great Britain would not recede from
her hostile attitude. One of the ministers declared that it was " an
ancient and well-established right" of His Majesty's government to
impress British seamen on board of neutral vessels. Before the final
decision of England was known, Louisiana, the eighteenth State, was,
on the 8th of April, admitted into the Union. The area of the new
commonwealth was more than forty-one thousand square miles ; and
her population, according to the census of 1810, had reached seventy-
seven thousand.
On the 4th of June a resolution declaring war against Great
Britain was passed by the House of Representatives. On the 17th of
the same month the bill received the sanction of the Senate ; and two
days afterward the President issued his proclamation of war. Vigor-
ous preparations for the impending conflict were made by Congress.
It was ordered to raise twenty-five thousand regular troops and fifty
thousand volunteers. At the same time the several States were re-
quested to call out a hundred thousand militia for the defence of the
coasts and harbors. A national loan of eleven million dollars, was au-
thorized. Henry Dearborn of Massachusetts was chosen first major-
general and commander-in-chief of the army.
Great Britain was already prepared for the conflict. Her armies
in Europe were immense and thoroughly equipped. Napoleon just at
this time began his famous invasion of Russia, and the allied nations
of Western Europe were for a while relieved of their apprehensions.
The British navy amounted to no less than a thousand and thirty-six
vessels. Of these there were two hundred iand fifty-four ships-of-the-
line, not one of which carried less than seventy-four guns of large
caliber. At various stations on the American coast there were eighty-
five war-vessels bearing the English flag, and ready for immediate ac-
tion. Lake Ontario was commanded by four British brigs carrying an
aggregate of sixty guns. The Canadian armies of England amounted
to seven thousand five hundred regulars and forty thousand militia.
Back of all these forces and armaments stood the seemingly inexhaust-
ible British treasury, Avith the ambitious young Lord Castlereagh and
■394
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
^
SCENE OF HULL'S CAMPAIGN,
1812.
his associate ministers to disburse it. As to George III., old age and
incurable insanity had at last prevailed to displace him from the throne
and to make the Prince Regent, George IV., the actual sovereign. In
all that appertained to preparation and readiness for the conflict the
United States bore no comparison to the pow-
erful foe.
The first movement of the war was made
by General William Hull, governor of Michi-
gan Territory. A force of twelve hundred Ohio
volunteers, together with three hundred regu-
lars, was organized at Dayton for the purpose
of overawing the Indians on the north-western
frontier. Hull was also authorized, should cir-
cumstances warrant such a course, to invade and
conquer Canada. The march began on the 1st
of June J and it was a full month before the
army, toiling through more than two hundred
miles of forests, reached the western extremity
-of Lake Erie. Arriving at the Maumee, Hull despatched his baggage,
stores and official papers in a boat to Detroit. But the British forces
posted at Maiden had already been informed of the declaration of
hostilities; and Hull's boat with every thing on board was captured.
Nevertheless, the American army pressed on to Detroit, where early
■in July the general received despatches informing him of the dec-
laration, of war, and directing him to proceed with the invasion of
Canada. On the 12th of the month he crossed the Detroit River to
Sandwich with the avowed purpose of capturing Maiden. And this
might easily have been accomplished had not the inefficiency of the
general checked the enthusiasm of the army.
Meanwhile, the news came that the American post at Mackinaw
had been surprised and captured by the British. This intelligence fur-
nished Hull a good excuse for recrossing the river to Detroit. Here
he received intelligence that Major Brush, sent forward by Governor
Meigs of Ohio, was approaching with reinforcements and supplies.
Major Van Home was accordingly despatched with a body of troops
to meet Brush at the River Raisin and conduct him safely to Detroit.
But Tecumtha, assisted by some British troops, had cut the lines of
communication and laid an ambush for Van Home's forces in the
neigborhood of Brownstown. The scheme was successful ; Van Home
ran into the trap and was severely defeated. Any kind of energetic
movement on Hull's part would have retrieved the disaster; but en-
MADISON'S ADMINISTRATION. 395
•ergy was altogether wanting ; and when, three days later, Colonel Mil-
ler with another detachment attacked and routed the savages with great
loss, he was hastily recalled to Detroit. The officers and men lost all
faith in the commander, and there were symptoms of a mutiny.
In the mean time. General Brock, the governor of Upper Can-
ada, arrived at Maiden and took command of the British forces. Act-
ing in conjunction with Tecumtha, he crossed the river, and on the
16th of August advanced to the siege of Detroit. The Americans in
their trenches outside of the fort were eager for battle, and stood with
lighted matches awaiting the order to fire. When the British were
within five hundred yards, to the amazement of both armies Hull
hoisted a white flag over the fort. There was a Lrief parley and then
a surrender, perhaps the most shameful in the history of the United
States. Not only the army in Detroit, but all the forces under Hull's
command, became prisoners of war. The whole of Michigan Territory
was surrendered to the British. At the capitulation the American offi-
cers in rage and despair stamped the ground, broke their swords and
tore off their epaulets. The whole country was humiliated at the dis-
graceful business. The government gave thirty British prisoners in
exchange for Hull, and he was brought before a court-martial charged
with treason, cowardice and conduct unbecoming an officer. He was
convicted on the last two charges, and sentenced to be shot; but the
President, having compassion on one who had served the country in
the Revolution, pardoned him. After all the discussions that have
been had on Hull and his campaign, the best that can be said of him
is that he was a patriot and a coward.
About the time of the fall of Detroit, Fort Dearborn, on the
present site of Chicago, was invested by an army of Indians. The
garrison was feeble, and the commandant proposed a surrender on
condition that his men should retire without molestation. This was
agreed to; but the savages, finding that the garrison had destroyed
the whisky that was in the fort, fell upon the retreating soldiers, killed
some of them, and distributed the rest as captives. On the day after
the capitulation Fort Dearborn was burned to the ground.
These losses, however, were more than compensated by the brill-
iant achievements of the young American navy. From the first it
became apparent that the war was destined to be a conflict on the sea-
coast and the ogean. The United States would act for the most part
on the defensive, and Great Britain would rely chiefly upon her navy.
The condition of both nations was such as to provoke this sort of war-
fare. On the one side was the British armament superior to any other
396 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ill the world, and on the other an exposed sea-coast, a few fortresses,.
and a navy of almost insignificant proportions. From the beginnings
the policy of the American government had been distinctly declared
against a standing array and a regular fleet. It was held that a citizen
soldiery and an extemporized flotilla would be sufficient for every
emergencv. A large military establishment, said the defenders of the
American system, is enormously expensive and a constant menace to
civil liberty. After the Revolution, especially during the administra-
tion of Jefferson, the military spirit was discouraged and the defenses
of the country fell into decay. In 1808 the whole coast of Maine
was defended only by Fort Sumner, at Portland. New Hampshire had
but one fortress, a half ruined block-house at Portsmouth. On the
coast of Massachusetts four fortifications — one at Cape Ann, one at
Salem, one at Marblehead, and Fort Independence in Boston Harbor
furnished the only security against attack. In the neighborhood of
Newport, Rhode Island, there were six works, some of importance,
others insignificant. New London, Connecticut, was defended by Fort
Trumbull, a block-house of considerable strength but in bad repair.
On Governor's Island, in New York Harbor, stood Fort Jay, which,
together with the Battery at the south end of Manhattan and some
slight fortifications on Ellis's and Bedloe's Islands, furnished a toler-
able protection. The whole coast of New Jersey lay open to invasion.
On Mud Island in the Delaware, a short distance below Philadelj)hia,
stood the formidable Fort Mifflin, an old British fort of the Revolu-
tion. Not less in strength and importance was Fort McHenry on the
Patapsco, commanding the approach to Baltimore. Annapolis was
defended by Fort Severn, then only a group of breast-works. Nor-
folk, Virginia, relied for protection on a fort of the same name and
another work, called Fort Nelson, on the opposite side of Elizabeth
River. In Charleston Harbor stood Fort Johnson on James's Island,
Fort Pinckney in front of the city, and Fort Moultrie of Revolutionary
fame. Upon these scattered fortifications and the terror inspired by
Fulton's torpedoes the Americans must depend for the defense of a
coast-line reaching from Passamaquoddy to the St. Mary's.
Such was the attitude and relative strength of the two nations.
Great, therefore, was the astonishment of the world when the American
sailors, not waiting to be attacked, went forth without a tremor to
smite the mistress of the seas. And greater the admiration when a
scries of brilliant victories declared for the flag of the Republic.
During the summer of 1812 the navy of the United States won a just
■and lasting renown. On the 19th of August the frigate Consfitulion^
MADISON'S ADMINISTRATION. 397
commanded by Captain Isaac Hull, overtook the British ship-of-war
Guerriere, off the coast of Massachusetts. Captain Dacres, who com-
manded the British vessel, had been boasting of his prowess and send-
ing challenges to American vessels to come out and fight; now there
was an opportunity to exhibit his valor. The vessels manoeuvred for
a while, the Constitution closing with her antagonist, until at half-pistol
shot she poured in a terrible broadside, sweeping the decks of tlie
Guerriere and deciding the contest. Dacres, after losing fifteen men
killed and sixty-three wounded, struck his colors and surrendered his
shattered vessel as a prize. The American loss was seven killed and
an equal number wounded. On the following morning the Guerriere,
being unmanageable, was blown up; and Hull returned to port with
his prisoners and spoils.
On the 18th of October the American sloop-of-war Wasp, of
eighteen guns, under command of Captain Jones, fell in with a fleet
of British merchantmen off the coast of Virginia. The squadron was
under convoy of the brig Frolic, of twenty-two guns, commanded by
Captain Whinyates, who put his vessel between the merchantmen and
the Wasp, and prepared for battle. A terrible engagement ensued,
lasting for three-quarters of an hour. Both ships became nearly help-
less; but the Wasp closed with her foe and delivered a final broadside
which completely cleared the deck. The American crew then boarded
the Frolic and struck the British flag ; for not a seaman was left above
deck to perform that service. Scarcely had the smoke of the conflict
cleared away when the Poictiers, a British seventy-four gun ship, bore
down upon the scene, captured the Wasp and retook the wreck of the
Frolic. But the fame of Captain Jones's victory was not dimmed by
the catastrophe.
Seven days afterward. Commodore Decatur, commanding the
frigate United States, of forty-four guns, attacked the British frigate
Macedonia, of forty-nine guns. The battle was fought a short distance
west of the Canary Islands. After a two hours' engagement, in which
the United States was but little injured, the Macedonia surrendered,
with a loss in killed and wounded of more than a hundred men. On
the 12th of December the ship Essex, commanded by Captain Porter,
captured the Nocton, a British packet, having on board fifty-five thou-
sand dollars in specie. More important still was the capture of the
frigate Java by the Constitution, now under command of Commodore
Bainbridge. On the 29th of December the two vessels met off San
Salvador, on the coast of Brazil. A furious battle ensued, continuing
for two hours. Every mast was torn from the British ship, and her
398 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
hull was burst with round shot. The deck was made slippery with the-
blood of more than two hundred killed and wounded seamen. The
vessel was reduced to a wreck before her flag was struck; then the
crew and passengers, numbering upward of four hundred, were trans-
ferred to the Constitution, and the hull of the Java was burned at sea.
The news of these successive victories roused the enthusiasm of the
people to the highest pitch. In the course of the year two hundred
and fifty British ships, carrying three thousand sailors, and cargoes of
immense value, were captured by the American cruisers. Filled with
exultation, the people of the United States saw in these naval tri-
umphs the omens of complete overthrow to the arrogant dominion of
Britain on the seas. The nations of Europe heard in astonishment.
France was well pleased ; for in these humiliations of her great enemy
she witnessed the fulfillment of Napoleon's prophecy when, at the
cession of Louisiana, he exclaimed with delight : " There ! I have this
day given to England a maritime rival that will sooner or later hum-
ble her pride!" For a while the English themselves were well-nigh
paralyzed. The British newspapers burst forth raging and declared
that the time-honored flag of England had been disgraced " by a piece
of striped bunting flying at the mast-heads of a few fir-built frigates,
manned by a handful of * -^^ * * and outlaws !" And the com-
ment, though stated in unpleasant language, was true !
During the summer and autumn of 1812 military operations
were active, but not decisive, on the Niagara frontier. The troops-
in that quarter, consisting of the New York militia, a few regulars,
and recruits from other States, were commanded by General Stephen
Van Rensselaer. The first movement of the Americans was made
against Queenstown, on the Canada side of the river. On the 13th
of October a thousand men were embarked in boats and landed on
the western shore. They were resisted at the water's edge, and
Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer, the leader, was wounded. The
subordinate officers led the charge, and the British batteries on the
heights of Queenstown were carried. The enemy's forces were ral-
lied, however, by General Brock, and returning to the charge, were
a second time repulsed. General Brock fell mortally wounded. The
Americans began to entrench themselves, and orders were sent across
the river for the remaining division, twelve hundred strong, to has-
ten to the rescue. But the American militia on the eastern shore de-
clared that they were there to defend the United States, and not to
invade Canada. There they stood all afternoon, while their comrades
at Queenstown were surrounded by the British, who came with strong:
MADISON'S ADMINISTRATION.
.199*
reinforcements fi om Foit George. The Americans bravely defended
themselves until th-ey had iosz a hundred and sixty men in killed and
wounded, and were then obliged to surrender. General Van Rensse-
laer, disgusted at the conduct of the New York militia, resigned his.
command, and was succeeded by General
Alexander Smyth of Virginia.
This officer began his career as com-
mander by issuing two proclamations that
would have put to shame the bulletins of
Bonaparte or Caesar. He declared that in
a few days his standards should be planted
in the strongholds of Canada. After cross-
ing Niagara and conquering the British do-
minions, he would annex them to the United
States ! His predecessors in command of the
army had been popular men, but wholly des-
titute of skill or experience in the art of war !
The soldiers of the "Army of the Center," as
he called the militia under his authority, had
now a general who would lead them to cer-
tain victory ! Every man who performed a
gallant action should have his name immortalized in the annals of his
country ! And so on for quantity and style.
In the mean time the Americans, numbering between four and
five thousand, had been rallied at Black Rock, a few miles north
of Buffalo. From this point, on the 28th of November, a company
was sent across to the Canada shore ; but instead of following with
a stronger detachment, General Smyth ordered the advance party to
return. A few days afterward another crossing was planned, and the
Americans were already embarked, when they were commanded to
return to winter quarters. The militia became mutinous. Smyth was
charged with cowardice and disloyalty, and after three months was
deposed from his command. Thus ended the military operations of
1812. In the autumn Madison was re-elected President; the choice
for Vice-President fell on Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts. In the
debates at the opening of Congress the policy of the administration
was strongly condemned by the opponents of the war; but vigorous
measures were adopted for strengthening the army and navy.
THE NIAGARA FRONTIER, 1812.
400 HISTORY OF THE UNTED STATES.
CHAPTER L.
WAR OF 1812.— CONTINUED.
IN the beginning of 1813 the American army was organized in three
divisions: the Army of the North, commanded by General
Wade Hampton, to operate in the country of Lake Champlain; the
Army of the Centre, under direction of the commander-in-chief, to
resume offensive movements on the Niagara frontier and Lake Ontario ;
THE Army of the West, under command of General Winchester,
who was soon superseded by General Harrison. Early in January the
latter division, made up of various detachments of militia from the
Western States, moved toward the head of Lake Erie to regain the
ground lost by Hull in the previous summer. On the 10th of the month
the American advance, composed of eight hundred men under Winchester,
reached the rapids of the Maumee. A body of British and Indians was
posted at Frenchtown, on the river Raisin, thirty miles from Winchester's
camp. A detachment of Americans pressed forward, attacked the enemy,
captured the town, encamped there, and on the 20th of the month were
joined by Winchester with the main division.
Two days afterward the Americans were suddenly assaulted by a
force of a thousand five hundred British and Indians under command of
General Proctor. A severe battle was fought, each party losing nearly
three hundred men. The British were checked, and for a while the issue
was doubtful ; but General Winchester, having been taken by the enemy,
advised his forces to capitulate under a pledge of protection given by
Proctor and his subordinates. As soon as the surrender was made the
British general set off at a rapid rate to return to Maiden. The American
wounded were left to the mercy of the savages, who at once began their
work with tomahawk and scalping-knife and torch. The two houses
into which most of the wounded had been crowded were fired, while the
painted barbarians stood around and hurled back into the flames whoever
attempted to escape. The rest of the prisoners were dragged away through
untold sufferings to Detroit, where they were ransomed at an enormous
price. This shameful campaign has fixed on the name of Proctor the
indelible stain of infamy.
General Harrison, on hearing the fate of Winchester's division, fell
back from the Maumee, but soon returned and built Fort Meigs. Here
WAR OF '12. 401
he remained until the 1st of May, when he was besieged by a force of two
thousand British and savages, led by Proctor and Tecumtha, Meanwhile,
General Clay with twelve hundred Kentuckians advanced to the relief of
the fort. The besiegers were attacked in turn, and at the same time the
besieged made a successful sally. But for the mistake of Colonel Dudley,
who allowed his detachment to be cut off and captured, the British would
have been completely routed. Again the American prisoners were treated
with savage cruelty until Tecumtha, not Proctor, interfered to save them.
In a few days the Indians deserted in large numbers, and Proctor, be-
coming alarmed, abandoned the siege, and on the 9th of May retreated to
Maiden.
For nearly three months active operations were suspended. In the
latter part of July, Proctor and Tecumtha with a force of nearly four
thousand men returned to Fort Meigs, now commanded by General Clay.
For several days the British general beat about the American position,
attempting to draw out the garrison. Failing in that, he filed off with
about half his forces and attacked Fort Stephenson, at Lower Sandusky.
This place was defended by a hundred and sixty men under command of
Colonel Croghan, a stripling but twenty-one years of age. But he ex-
hibited the skill and bravery of a veteran. To the enemy's summons,
accompanied with a threat of massacre in case of refusal, he answered that
the fort should be held as long as there was a man left alive within it.
For a while the British cannonaded the ramparts without much effect,
and on the 2d of August advanced to carry the place by storm. Croghan
filled his only gun with slugs and grape-shot, and masked it in such a
position as to rake the ditch from end to end. The British, believing the
fort to be silenced, crowded into the fatal trench, and were swept away
almost to a man. The repulse was complete. Proctor, fearing the ap-
proach of Harrison, raised the siege and returned to Maiden.
At this time the waters of Lake Erie were commanded by a British
squadron of six vessels carrying sixty-three guns. It was seen that a suc-
cessful invasion of Canada could only be made by first gaining control of
the lake. This serious undertaking was imposed on Commodore Oliver
H. Perry of Rhode Island — a young man not twenty-eight years old who
had never been in a naval battle. His antagonist, Commodore Barclay,
was a veteran from the sea-service of Europe. With indefatigable energy
Perry directed the construction of nine ships, carrying fifty-four guns, and
was soon afloat on the lake. On the 10th of September the two fleets met
a short distance north-west of Put-in Bay. Careful directions had been
given by both commanders for the impending battle ; both were resolved
on victory. The fight was begun by the American squadron, Perry's
26
402 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
flag-ship, the Lawrence, leading the attack. His principal antagonist was
the Detroit, under the immediate command of Barclay. The British guns,
being longer, had the wider range, and were better served. The Lawrence
was ruined; nearly all the cannon were dismounted, masts torn away,
sailors killed.
Between the other ships the battle was proceeding in a desultory
way without much damage ; but Barclay's flag-ship was almost as nearly
wrecked as the Laivrence. Perceiving with quick eye how the battle stood,
the dauntless Perry, himself unhurt, put on his uniform, seized his ban-
ner, got overboard into an open boat, passed within pistol-shot of the
enemy's ships, a storm of balls flying around him, and transferred his flag
to the Niagara. A shout went up from the American fleet ; it was the
signal of victory. With the powerful Niagara still uninjured by the
battle. Perry bore down upon the enemy's line, drove right through
the midst, discharging terrible broadsides right and left. In fifteen
minutes the work was done ; the British fleet was helpless. Perry with
a touch of pride returned to the bloody deck of the Lawrence, and there
received the surrender. And then he sent to General Harrison this
femous despatch : " We have met the enemy, and they are ours — two
ships, two brigs, one schooner and one sloop."
This victory gave the Americans full control of Lake Erie. Both
Proctor and Harrison awaited the result. If Barclay should win, Proctor
would invade Ohio; if Perry should prove victorious, Harrison would
conquer Canada. For the Americans the way was now opened. On the
27th of September Harrison's army was embarked at Sandusky Bay and
landed near Maiden. The disheartened British retreated to Sandwich,
the Americans following hard after. From the latter place Proctor con-
tinued his retreat to the river Thames, and there faced about to fight.
The battle-field was well chosen by the British, whose lines extended
from the river to a swamp. Here, on the 5th of October, they were
attacked by the Americans led by Harrison and General Shelby, governor
of Kentucky. In the beginning of the battle. Proctor, being a coward,
ran. The British regulars sustained the attack with firmness, and were
only broken when furiously charged by the Kentuckians under Colonel
Richard M. Johnson. When that part of the field was won, the Ameri-
cans wheeled against the Indians, who, to the number of fifteen hundred,
lay hidden in the swamp to the west. Here the battle raged fiercely.
Tecuratha had staked all on the issue. For a while his war-whoop
sounded above the din of the conflict. Presently his voice was heard no
longer, for the great chieftain had fallen. At the same time Colonel
Johnson was borne away severely wounded. The savages, appalled by
WAR OF '12.
403
the death of their leader, fled in despair. The victory was complete. So
ended the campaign in the West. The Indian confederacy was broken
to pieces. All that Hull had lost was regained. Michigan was recovered.
Ohio no longer feared invasion. Perry swept Lake Erie with his fleet.
Canada was prostrated before the victorious army of Harrison.
Meanwhile, the Creeks of Alabama, kinsmen of the Shawnees, had
taken up arms. In the latter part of August, Fort Mims, forty miles
north of Mobile, was surprised by the savages, who appeased their thirst
for blood with the murder of nearly four hundred people ; not a woman
or child was spared, and but few of the men in the fort escaped. The
news of the massacre spread consternation throughout the Southwest.
The governors of Tennessee, Georgia and Mississippi Territory made
immediate preparations for invading the country of the Creeks. The
Tennesseeans, under command of General Jackson, were first to the res-
cue. A detachment of nine hundred men, led
by General Coifee, reached the Indian town
of Tallushatchee, attacked it, burned it, left
not an Indian alive. On the 8th of Novem-
ber a battle was fought at Talladega, east of
the Coosa, and the savages were defeated with
severe losses. In the latter part of the same
month another fight occurred at Autosse, on
the south bank of the Tallapoosa, and again
the Indians were routed.
During the winter Jackson's troops, un-
provided and starving, became mutinous and
Avere going home. But the general set the
example of living on acorns ; then rode before
the rebellious line and threatened with death the
stirred. And no man stirred.
SCENE OF THE CKEEK WAK,
1813-14.
first mutineer who
On the 22d of January, 1814, the battle
of Emucfau was fought on the west bank of the Tallapoosa. The valor
of the Tennesseeans again gave them the victory. At Tohopeka, called
by the whites the Horseshoe Bend, the Creeks made their final stand.
Here the Tallapoosa winds westward and northward, enclosing a large
tract of land in the form of a peninsula with a narrow neck. This posi-
tion the Indians had fortified with more than their usual skill. The
whites, led by General Coffee, surrounded the place, so as to prevent
escape by crossing the river. On the 27th of March, the main body
of whites under General Jackson stormed the breastworks and drove
the Indians into the bend. There, huddled together without the pos-
sibility of escape, a thousand Creek warriors, with the women and
404 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
children of the tribe, met their doom. The desperate Red men asked
no quarter, and none was given. The few chiefs who were still abroad
sent in their submission ; the spirit of the nation was completely
broken.
On the 25th of April, 1813, General Dearborn, commanding the
A.rmy of the Centre, embarked his forces at Sackett's Harbor, near the
eastern extremity of Lake Ontario, The object of the exjjedition was to
capture Toronto, the capital of Upper Canada. Here was the most im-
portant depot of supplies in British America. The American fleet under
Commodore Chauncey had already obtained the mastery of the lake, so
that Dearborn's passage was unopposed. On the 27th of the month a
force of seventeen hundred men, commanded by General Pike, was
landed within two miles of Toronto. At the water's edge they were
met by the British. The Americans drove the enemy for a mile and
a half, stormed a battery, and rushed forward to carry the main de-
fences. At that moment the British magazine blew up Avith terrific
violence. The assaulting column was covered with the debris of the
explosion. Two hundred men were killed or wounded. General Pike
was fatally injured, but lived long enough to hear the shout of vic-
tory; for the Americans, first shocked and then maddened by the
calamity, made a furious charge and drove the British out of the town.
General Sheaife with a body of regulars escaped ; the rest were taken
prisoners. Property to the value of a half million dollars was secured
to the victors.
While this movement was taking place the enemy made a descent
on Sackett's Harbor. By the withdrawal of the American forces that
post had been left exposed. The British succeeded in destroying a quan-
tity of stores ; but General Brown rallied the militia, and drove back the
assailants with considerable loss. Meanwhile, the victorious troops at
Toronto had re-embarked and crossed the lake to the mouth of the
Niagara. On the 27th of May the Americans, led by Generals Chandler
and Winder, crossed the river and stormed Fort George, on the Canada
shore. The British hastily destroyed their posts along the Niagara and
retreated to Burlington Bay, at the western extremity of the lake. The
Americans, pursuing them thither, were attacked in the night, but suc-
ceeded in repulsing the enemy with loss.
During the months of summer military operations on the frontier
were suspended. After the battle of the Thames, General Harrison had
transferred his forces to Buffalo, and then resigned his commission. On
account of old age and ill health General Dearborn also withdrew from
the service, and wito succeeded by General Wilkinson. The next cam-
WAR OF '12. 405
paign, which was {planned by General Armstrong, secretary of war, em-
braced the conquest of Montreal. For this purpose the Army of the
Centre, under Wilkinson, was ordered to join the Army of the North at
some convenient point on the St. Lawrence. The enterprise was attended
with many difficulties and not a few delays. Not until the 5th of Novem-
ber did a force of seven thousand men, embarking from the mouth of
French Creek, twenty miles north of Sackett's Harbor, sail down the St.
Lawrence for the conquest of Montreal. Parties of British, Canadians
and Indians, gathering on the northern bank of the river, constantly im-
peded the progress of the expedition. General Brown was landed with a
considerable force to disperse these bands or drive the enemy into the
interior. On the 11th of the month a severe battle was fought at a
place called Chrysler's Field. Neither party gained a victory, but the
advantage remained with the British. The Americans, having lost
nearly three hundred men in the fight, passed down the river to St.
Regis, on the southern shore, where the forces of General Hampton
were expected from Plattsburg to form a junction with Wilkinson's
command. But Hampton did not stir; and the project of attacking
Montreal had to be abandoned. The Americans then Avent into winter
quarters at Fort Covington, at the fork of Salmon River, nine miles
from St. Regis.
In the mean time, the British on the Niagara frontier rallied and
advanced against Fort George. General McClure, the commandant,
abandoned the place on the approach of the enemy, but before retreating
burned the Canadian town of Newark. It cost the people of Northern
New York dearly ; for the British and Indians crossed the river, cap-
tured Fort Niagara, and fired the villages of Youngstown, Lewiston and
Manchester. On next to the last day of the year Black Rock and BuiFalo
were laid in ashes.
In the sea-fights of 1813 victory generally declared for the British.
During the year both nations wasted much blood and treasure on the
ocean. Off the coast of Demarara, on the 24th of February, the sloop-
of-war Hornet, commanded by Captain James Lawrence, fell in with the
British brig Peacock. The ships were equally matched. A terrible battle
of fifteen minutes ensued, and the Peacock, already sinking, struck her
colors. While the Americans were trying to transfer the conquered crew
the ocean yaAvned and the brig sank out of sight. Nine British sailors
and three of Lawrence's men were sucked down in the whirlpool.
On returning to Boston the command of the Chesapeake — one of
the best frigates in the American navy — ^was given to Lawrence, and
again he put to sea. Before sailing he received a challenge from Captain
406 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Broke, of the British frigate Shannon, to come out and fight him. Law-
rence ought not to have accepted the banter; for his equipments were
incomplete and his crew ill assorted, sick and half mutinous. But he was
young, and the favorite of the nation ; fired with applause, he went un-
hesitatingly to meet his foe. Eastward from Cape Ann the two vessels
met on the first day of June. The battle was obstinate, brief, dreadful.
In a short time every officer who could direct the movements of the
Chesapeake was either killed or wounded. The brave young Lawrence
was struck with a musket-ball, and fell dying on the bloody deck.
As they bore him down the hatchway he gave in feeble voice his last
lieroic order — ever afterward the motto of the American sailor — " Don't
GIVE UP THE SHIP !" The British were already leaping on deck, and
the flag of England was hoisted over the shattered vessel. Both
ships were charnel-houses; but the Shannon was still able to tow her
prize into the harbor of Halifax. There the bodies of Lawrence and
Ludlow, second in command, were tenderly and honorably buried by the
British.
The next important naval battle was fought on the 14th of August
between the American brig Argus and the British Pelican. The former
vessel had made a daring cruise about the coasts of England, capturing
more than twenty ships. Herself overtaken by the Pelican, she was
obliged, after a severe conflict, to surrender. On the 5th of September
another British brig, the Boxer, cruising off the coast of Maine, was over-
hauled and captured by the American Enterprise, commanded by Captain
Burrows. The fight raged for three-quarters of an hour, when the Boxer
surrendered. Captain Blyth, the British commander, was killed; and
the gallant Burrows received a mortal wound. The bodies of both
officers were taken to Portland and buried side by side with military
honors. All summer long Captain Porter in the frigate Essex cruised in
the South Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. For five months he was the
terror of British merchantmen in those broad waters. On the 28th of
the following March, while the Essex was lying in the harbor of Val-
paraiso, she was beset, contrary to the law of nations, by two powerful
British vessels, the Phoebe and the Cherub. The Essex had been crippled
by a storm, and was anchored in neutral waters ; in that condition Captain
Porter fought his two antagonists until nearly all of his men were killed
or wounded ; then struck his colors and surrendered. Notwithstanding
the losses sustained by the American navy, privateers continued to scour
the ocean and capture British vessels.
From honorable warfare the naval officers of England stooped to
marauding along the sea-shore. Early in the year a squadron entered
THE CAMPAIGNS OF '14. 407
Delaware Bay and anchored before Lewistown. A requisition on the in-
habitants to supply the fleet with provisions was met with a brave refusal.
A threat to burn the town was answered with a message of defiance. A
bombardment of twenty-four hours' duration followed ; the houses were
much injured, and the people fled, carrying their property to places of
safety. Other British men-of-war entered the Chesapeake and burned
several villages on the shores of the bay. At the town of Hampton, just
above the Roads, the soldiers and marines perpetrated such outrages as
covered their memory with shame. Commodore Hardy, to whom the
blockade of the New England harbors had been assigned, behaved with
more humanity; even the Americans recognized and praised Lis honor-
able conduct. The year 1813 closed without decisive results.
CHAPTER LI.
THE CAMPAIGNS OF '14.
IN the spring of 1814 another invasion of Canada was planned. Thb
Niagara frontier was the scene of operations; but there was much
delay in bringing the scattered detachments of General Wilkinson's army
into proper position. Not until the 3d of July did Generals Scott and
Ripley, at the head of three thousand men, cross the Niagara from Black
Rock to Fort Erie. This post, garrisoned by two hundred British, was
surrendered without a battle. On the following day the Americans ad-
vanced down the river-bank in the direction of Chippewa village. Before
reaching that place, however, they were met by the British army, led by
General Riall. On the evening of the 5th a severe battle was fought on
the plain just south of Chippewa River. The Americans, led on by
Generals Scott and Ripley and the gallant Major Jessup, won the day t
but their loss amounted to three hundred and thirty-eight men. The
British veterans, after more than five hundred of their number had fallen,
urere driven into their entrenchments.
General Riall retreated first to Queenstown and afterward to Bur-
lington Heights. General Scott, commanding the American right, was
detached to watch the movements of the enemy. On the evening of the
25th of July he found himself suddenly confronted by Riall's army,
«trongly posted on the high grounds in sight of Niagara Falls. Here
408 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
was fought the hardest battle of the war. A man less courageous and
self-confident than Scott would have retreated; but with extraordinary
daring he held his own until reinforced by the other divisions of the
army. The British reserves were also rapidly brought into action.
Twilight faded into darkness, and still the battle was undecided. A de-
tachment of Americans, getting upon the British rear, captured General
Riall and his entire staff. Still the contest raged. The key to the
enemy's position was a high ground crowned with a battery. Calling
Colonel James Miller to his side and pointing to the hilL General Browu
said, " Colonel, take your regiment and storm that battery." " I'll tey,
SIR," was the answer of the gallant officer ; and he did take it, and held
it against three desperate assaults of the British. In the last charge
General Drummond, who led, was wounded, and the royal army, num-
bering fully five thousand, was driven from the field with a loss of eight
hundred and seventy-eight men. The Americans engaged in the battle
numbered about four thousand ; their loss in killed, wounded and miss-
ing was more than eight hundred.
After this battle of Niagara, or Lundy's Lane, as it is sometimes
called, General Ripley took commandof the American forces; for Generals
Brown and Scott were both wounded. It was deemed prudent to fall
back to Fort Erie. To that place General Gaines crossed over from
Buffalo, and being the senior officer, assumed command of the army.
Very soon General Drummond received reinforcements, moved forward,
and on the 4th of August invested Fort Erie. The siege continued for
ten days, and then the British attempted to storm the works, but were
driven back with severe losses. But the enemy was reinforced and the
siege resumed. A regular and destructive bombardment was kept up by
the British, and was answered by the Americans with equal energy. On
the 28th of August General Gaines was injured by the explosion of a
shell and obliged to relinquish his command. General Brown, though
still suffering from the wound received at Niagara, was again called to
direct the defences of the fort. On the 17th of September a sortie was
ordered, and the advanced works of the British were gallantly carried.
At the same time news arrived that the American general Izard was ai>-
proaching from Plattsburg with strong reinforcements. Alarmed at the
threatening aspect of affairs, the British raised the siege and retreated to
Fort George. On the 5th of November Fort Erie was evacuated and
destroyed by the Americans, who then recrossed the Niagara and went
into winter quarters at Black Rock and Buffalo. So ended the war in
the country between Lakes Erie and Ontario.
The winter of 1813-14 was passed by the Army of the North at
THE CAMPAIGNS OF 14. 40&
French Mills, afterward called Fort Covington. In the latter part of
February General Wilkinson advanced his forces to Plattsburg, and in
the following month began an invasion of Canada. At La Colle, on the
west bank of the Sorel, he encountered a force of the enemy, made an im-
prudent attack and was defeated. Falling back to Plattsburg, he was
superseded by General Izard. How that officer marched to the relief or
General Brown at Fort Erie has already been narrated. The remaining
division of the northern army, fifteen hundred strong, was left under com-
mand of General Macomb at Plattsburg. At this time the American
flotilla on Lake Champlain was commanded by Commodore MacDonough.
For the purpose of destroying this fleet and obtaining control of the lake,
the British general Prevost advanced into Northern New York at the
head of fourteen thousand men, and at the same time ordered Commodore
Downie to ascend the Sorel with his fleet.
The invading army reached Plattsburg without opposition. Com-
modore MacDonough's squadron lay in the bay. On the 6th of Septem-
ber General Macomb retired with his small but courageous army to the
south bank of the Saranac, which skirted the village. On came the
British, entered the town, and attempted to cross the river, but were
driven back. For four days they renewed their efibrts ; the Americans
had torn up the bridges, and a passage could not be effected. The British
fleet was now ready for action, and a general battle by land and water
was planned for the 11th. Prevost's army, arranged in three columns,
was to sweep across the Saranac and carry Macomb's position, while
Downie's powerful flotilla was to bear down on MacDonough. The
naval battle began first, and was obstinately fought for two hours and a
half. At the end of that time Downie and many of his officers had been
killed; the heavier British vessels were disabled and obliged to strike
their colors. The smaller ships escaped ; for the American brigs were
so badly crippled that pursuit could not be made. Nevertheless, the
victory on the lake was complete and glorious. The news was carried
ashore, where the Americans were bravely contesting the passage of the
river against overwhelming; numbers. At one ford the British column
succeeded in crossing ; but the tidings from the lake fired the militia with
ardor ; they made a rush, and the enemy was driven back. Prevost, after
losing nearly two thousand five hundred men and squandering two and a
half million dollars in a fruitless campaign, retired precipitately to Canada,
The ministry of England, made wise by the disasters of this invasion,
began to devise measures looking to peace.
In the country of the Chesapeake the scenes of the previous year
were renewed by the British. Late in the summer Admiral Cochrane
410 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
■ arrived off the coast of Virginia with an armament of twenty-one vessels.
General Ross Avith an army of four thousand veterans, treed from service
in Europe, came with the fleet. The American squadron, commanded
by Commodore Barney, was unable to oppose so powerful a force. The
enemy's flotilla entered the Chesapeake wdth the purpose of attacking
Washington and Baltimore. The larger division of the British fleet
sailed into the Patuxent, and on the 19th of August the forces of General
Ross were landed at the town of Benedict. Commodore Barney was
obliged to blow up his vessels and take to the shore. From Benedict the
British advanced against Washington. At Bladensburg, six miles north-
east of the capital, they were met, on the 24th of the month, by the
militia and the marines under Barney. Here a battle was fought. The
undisciplined militia behaved badly. Barney's seamen were overpowered
by the British, and himself taken prisoner. The news of the defeat was
rapidly borne to Washington. The President, the cabinet officers and
the people betook themselves to flight, and Ross marched unopposed into
the city. He had been ordered by his superiors to use the torch, and the
work of destruction was accordingly begun. All the public buildings ex-
cept the Patent Office were burned. The beautiful but unfinished Capitol
and the President's house were left a mass of blackened ruins. Many
private edifices were also destroyed ; but General Ross, himself a humane
man, did less than he was ordered to do.*
Five days after the capture of Washington, a portion of the British
fleet, ascending the Potomac, reached Alexandria. The inhabitants of
that town, in order to avoid the fate of the capital, purchased the forbear-
ance of the enemy by the surrender of twenty-one ships, sixteen thousand
barrels of flour and a thousand hogsheads of tobacco. Baltimore redeemed
herself more bravely. Against that city, after the capture of Washington,
General Ross proceeded with his army and fleet. Meanwhile, the militia,
to the number of ten thousand, had gathered under command of General
Samuel Smith, a Revolutionary veteran. On the 12th of September the
British were landed at North Point, at the mouth of the Patapsco ; and
the fleet began the ascent of the river. The land-forces, after marching
about halfway to Baltimore, were met by the Americans under General
Strieker. A skirmish ensued in which General Ross was killed; but
Colonel Brooks assumed command of the invading army, and the march
continued. AVhen approaching the city, the British came upon the Ameri-
can lines and were brought to a halt by a severe cannonade. General
* An excuse for this outrageous barbarism was found in tlie previous conduct of the
Americans, who, at Toronto and other places on the Canadian frontier, had behared but
little better.
THE CAMPAIGNS OF '14. 411
Strieker, however, ordered his men to fall back to a second line of
defences, from which they gave the enemy a permanent check.
Meanwhile, the British squadron had ascended the Patapsco and
begun the bombardment of Fort McHenry, at the entrance to the har-
bor. From sunrise of the 13th until after midnight the guns of the
ileet poured a tempest of shot and shells upon the fortress.''^ At the
end of that time the soldiers of the garrison were as full of spirit and
the works as strong as at the beginning. It was plain that the Brit-
ish had undertaken more than they could accomplish. Disheartened
and bafBed, they ceased to fire. The land-forces retired from before
the American entrenchments and re-embarked. The siege of Balti-
more was at an end.
During the summer of 1814 two expeditions were made against
the British and Indians of the North-west. In May a force of two
hundred men ascended the Mississijjpi from St. Louis and took post
at Prairie du Chien, a short distance above the mouth of the Wiscon-
sin. The object was to overawe the hostile Winnebagoes and Chip-
pewas by establishing an outpost in their territory. But before the
fort was well begun a force of six hundred Canadians and Indians in-
vested the place, and on the 17th of July compelled the detachment
to surrender. The more important expedition was directed against
the British fortress and depot of stores at Mackinaw. A regiment
of six hundred men, commanded by Colonel Croghan, famous for his
heroism at Sandusky, marched northward in midsummer from De-
troit. Some vessels of Perry's fleet accompanied the land forces as a
convoy ; but the movement was slow, and Mackinaw was not reached
until the 4th of August. Finding the defences of the place too high
and strong to be injured by his guns, Croghan ordered an assault,
which was made with spirit, but repulsed. The enterprise was then
abandoned, with no further injury to the British than the destruc-
tion of some supplies and shipping in Georgian Bay.
New England did not escape the ravages of war. On the 9th
:and 10th of August the village of Stonington, in the south-eastern
•corner of Connecticut, was bombarded by Commodore Hardy; but
the British, attempting to land, were beaten back by the militia.
The fisheries of the New England coast were for the most part bro-
ken up. The salt-works at Cape Cod escaped only by the payment
-of heavy ransoms. All the principal harbors from Maine to Dela-
* During the night of the bombardment, Francis S. Key, detained on board a British
ship and watching the American flag over Fort McPIenry — seen at intervals bv the glare
•of rockets and the flash of cannon — composed The Star-spangled Banner.
412 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ware were under a rigorous blockade, and the foreign commerce of
the Eastern States was totally destroyed. The beacons in the light-
houses were allowed to burn out, and a general gloom settled over
the country.
From the beginning many of the peojsle of New England had
opposed the war. Their interests centred in ships and factories; the
former were captured at sea, and the latter came to a stand-still.
Industry was paralyzed. The members of the Federal party cried out
against the continuance of the contest. The legislature of ISIassachu-
setts advised the calling of a convention. The other Eastern States
responded to the call ; and on the 14th of December the delegates
assembled at Hartford. The objects of the convention were not very
clearly expressed; but opposition to the war and the policy of the
administration Avas the leading principle. The leaders of the Dem-
ocratic party, who supported the war-policy of the government, did
not hesitate to say that the purposes of the assembly were disloyal
and treasonable. Be that as it may, the convention ruined the Fed-
eral party. After remaining in session with closed doors for nearly
three weeks, the delegates published an address more moderate and
just than had been expected ; and then adjourned. But little hope
of political preferment remained for those who participated in the
Hartford convention.
During the progress of the war the Spanish authorities of Flor-
ida sympathized with the British. In the month of August a de-
tachment of the enemy's fleet was allowed by the commandant of
Pensacola to use that post for the purpose of fitting out an expedition
against Fort Bowyer, commanding the entrance to the bay of Mobile.
On the 15th of September the latter post was attacked, but the assail-
ants were driven off. General Jackson, who at that time commanded
the American forces in the South, remonstrated with the Spaniards
against this violation of neutrality, but received no satisfaction. Jack-
son, whose way it was to mete out summary justice to offenders, marched
a force against Pensacola, stormed the town and drove the British out
of Florida. This was the beginning of the last campaign of the war.
After the taking of Pensacola, General Jackson returned to his
headquarters at Mobile. There he learned that the British were mak-
ing formidable preparations for the conquest of Louisiana. Bepairing
at once to New Orleans, he assumed control of the city, declared mar-
tial law, mustered the militia, and adopted the most vigorous meas-
ures for repelling the invasion. From La Fitte, chief of a band of
smugglers in the Bay of Barataria, he obtained information of the-
THE CAMPAIGNS OF '14. 413
enemy's plans. The British army, numbering twelve thousand, came
in a fleet of fifty vessels from Jamaica. Sir Edward Packenham, broth-
er-in-law of the duke of Wellington, was commander of the invading
forces. On the 10th of December the squadron entered the outlet of
Lake Borgne, sixty miles north-east of New Orleans. Four days af-
terward a flotilla of gun-boats which had been placed to guard the
lake was captured by the British, but not until a severe loss had been
inflicted on the enemy.
On the 2 2d of the month Packenham's advance reached the
Mississippi nine miles below the city. A detachment was sent to the
western bank of the river, but this operation was checked by a counter
movement on the part of the Americans. On the night of the 23d
General Jackson sent a schooner down the Mississippi to bombard the
British camp, while at the same time he and General Coffee advanced
with two thousand Tennessee riflemen to attack Packenham's camp
in front. After a bloody assault Jackson was obliged to retire, the
enemy losing most in the engagement. On the following day Jackson
fell back and took a strong position along the canal, four miles below
the city. Packenham advanced, and on the 28th cannonaded the
American position with but little effect. On New Year's day the
attack was renewed. The heavy guns of the British had now been
brought into position; but the Americans easily held their ground, and
the enemy was again driven back. Packenham now made arrange-
ments to lead his whole army in a grand assault on the American lines.
Jackson was ready. Earthworks had been constructed, and a
long line of cotton-bales and sand-bags thrown up for protection. On
the morning of the memorable 8th of January the British moved for-
ward. They went to a terrible fate. The battle began with the light
of early morning, and was ended before nine o'clock. Packenham
hurled column after column against the American position, and col-
umn after column was smitten with irretrievable ruin. Jackson's men,
behind their breastworks, were almost entirely secure from the enemy's
fire, while every discharge of the Tennessee and Kentucky rifles told
with awful effect on the exposed veterans of England. Packenham,
trying to rally his men, was killed; General Gibbs, second in com-
mand, was mortally wounded. General Keene fell disabled; only
General Lambert was left to call the shattered fragments of the army
from the field. Never was there in a great battle such disparity of
losses. Of the British fully seven hundred were killed, fourteen hun-
dred wounded, and five hundred taken prisoners. The American loss
amounted to eight hilled and tliirteen wounded.
414 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
After the battle Jackson granted a truce for the burial of the-
British dead. That done, General Lambert recalled the detachment
from the west bank of the river and retired with his ruined army into
Lake Borgne. At Fort Bowyer he received the news of peace.
Jackson marched into New Orleans with his victorious army, and was
received with unbounded enthusiasm. Such, so far as operations by
land were concerned, was the close of the war. On the ocean hostili-
ties lingered until spring. On the 20th of February the American
frigate Constitution, cruising off Cape St. Vincent, caught sight of two-
hostile vessels, gave chase, and after a severe fight captured them.
They proved to be British brigs — the Cyane, of thirty-six guns, and
the Levant, of eighteen. On the 23d of March the American Hornet,
commanded by Captain Biddle. ended the conflict by capturing the
British Penguin off the coast of Brazil.
Already a treaty of peace had been made and ratified. Both na-
tions had long desired such a result. In the summer of 1814 Amer-
ican commissioners were sent to Ghent, in Belgium, and were there
met by Lord Gambler, Henry Goulburn and William Adams, ambas-
sadors of Great Britain. The agents of the United States were John
Quincy Adams, James A. Bayard, Henry Clay, Jonathan Russell and
Albert Gallatin. Several months were spent in negotiations ; and on
the 24th of December, 1814, a treaty was agreed to and signed. In
England the news was received with deep satisfaction; in the United
States, with a delight bordering on madness. Before the terms of
settlement could be known, the people broke forth in universal jubilee^
Nobody stopped to inquire whether the treaty was good or bad, hon-
orable or dishonorable. The Federalists found abundant reason for
rejoicing that a war which they had persistently opposed as impolitic
and unjust, was at an end. The Democrats sent up a double huzza,
shouting first for Jackson's victory and afterward for peace. Nor
could the country well be blamed for rejoicing that a conflict which
hftd cost the United States a thousand six hundred and eighty-three
vessels and more than eighteen thousand sailors, was ended. The
war-cloud rolled away like an incubus from the public mind. The
long blockaded, half-rotten shipping of New England was decked with
flags and streamers, and in one day the dock-yards were ringing with
the sound of saw and hammer. On the 18th of February the treaty
was ratified by the Senate of the United States, and peace was publicly
proclaimed. It was in the interim between the conclusion of the treaty
and the reception of the news in the United States that the battle of New
Orleans was fought. A telegraph would have saved all that bloodshed.
There never was a more absurd treaty than that of Ghent. Its-
THE CAMPAIGNS OF '14. 415-
only significance was that Great Britain and the United States, having
been at war, agreed to be at peace. Not one of the distinctive issues
to decide which the war had been undertaken was settled or even men-
tioned. Of the impressment of American seamen not a word was said.
The wrongs done to the commerce of the United States were not re-
ferred to. The rights of neutral nations were left as undetermined as
before. Of " free trade and sailors' rights," which had been the battle-
cry of the American navy, no mention was made. The principal articles
of the compact were devoted to the settlement of unimportant bounda-
ries and the possession of some petty islands in the Bay of Passama-
quoddy. There is little doubt, however, that at the time of the treaty
Great Britain gave the United States a private assurance that impress-
ment and the other wrongs complained of by the Americans should be
practiced no more. For the space of sixty years vessels bearing the flag
of the United States have been secure from such insults as caused the war
of 1812. Another advantage gained by America was the recognition of
her naval power. It was no longer doubtful that American sailors were
the peers in valor and patriotism of any seamen in the world. It was
no small triumph for the Republic that her flag should henceforth be
honored on every ocean.
At the close of the conflict the country was burdened with a
debt of a hundred million dollars. The monetary affairs of the na-
tion were in a deplorable condition. The charter of the Bank of the
United States expired in 1811, and in the following years the other
banks of the country were obliged to suspend specie payment. The
people were thus deprived of the currency necessary for the transac-
tion of business. Domestic commerce was paralyzed by the want of
money, and foreign trade destroyed by the enemy's fleet. In the year
after the close of the war a bill was passed by Congress to recharter
the Bank of the United States. The measure being objectionable, the
President interposed his veto ; but in the following session the bill
was again passed in an amended form. The capital was fixed at thir-
ty-five million dollars. The central banking-house was established at
Philadelphia, and branches were authorized at various other cities.
On the 4th of March, 1817, the new financial institution went into
operation ; and the business and credit of the country were thereby
greatly improved. Meanwhile, the United States had been engaged
in a foreign war.
During the conflict with Great Britain the Algerine pirates re-
newed their depredations on American commerce. As soon as the treaty
of Ghent was concluded the government of the United States ordered
Commodore Decatur, commanding a fleet of nine vessels, to proceed to
416 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the Mediterranean and chastise the Barbary sea-robbers into submission.
On the 17th of June, Decatur, cruising near Gibraltar, fell in with the
principal frigate of the Algerine squadron, and after a severe fight of
twenty minutes compelled the Moorish ship to surrender. Thirty of the
piratical crew, including the admiral, were killed, and more than four
hundred taken prisoners. On the 19th Decatur captured another frigate,
bearing twenty guns and a hundred and eight men. A few days after-
^ward he sailed into the Bay of Algiers, and dictated to the humbled and
terrified dey the terms of a treaty. The M.oorish emperor was obliged to
release his American prisoners without ransom, to relinquish all claims to
tribute, and to give a pledge that his ships should trouble American mer-
<3hantmen no more. Decatur next sailed against Tunis and Tripoli, com-
pelled both of these states to give pledges of good conduct, and to pay
large sums for former violations of international law. From that day
until the present the Barbary powers have had a wholesome dread of the
American flag.
The close of Madison's troubled administration was signalized by
the admission of Indiana — the smallest of the Western States — into the
Union. The new commonwealth, admitted in December, 1816, came
with an area of nearly thirty-four thousand square miles, and a popula-
tion of ninety-eight thousand. About the same time was founded the
Colonization Society of the United States. Many of the most distin-
guished men in America became members of the association, the object
of which was to provide somewhere in the world a refiige for free persons
of color. Liberia, on the western coast of Africa, was finally selected as
the seat of the proposed colony. A republican form of government was
established there, and immigrants arrived in sufficient numbers to foimd
a flourishing negro State. The capital was named Monrovia, in honor of
James Monroe, who, in the fall of 1816, was elected as Madison's suc-
cessor in the presidency. At the same time Daniel D. Torapkius of New
York was chosen Vice-President.
CHAPTER LII.
MONROE'S ADMINISTRATION.
TN its political principles the new administration was Democratic. Thp
-*- policy of Madison was adopted by his successor. But the stormy
times of Madison gave place to many years of almost unbroken peace.
The new President was a native of Virginia ; a man of great talents and
MONROE'S ADMINISTRATION. 417
tujcomplishments. He had been a Revolutionary soldier ; a member of
the House of Representatives; a senator; governor of Virginia; envoy
to France ; minister to England ; secretary of state under Madison. The
members of the new cabinet were — John Quincy Adams, secretary of state ;
William H. Crawford, secretary of the treasury ; John C. Calhoun, secre-
tary of war ; William Wirt, attorney-general. The animosities and party
strifes of the previous years were in a measure forgotten. Statesmen of all
parties devoted their energies to the payment of the national debt. It was
a herculean task ; but commerce revived ; the government was economic-
ally administered ; population increased ; wealth flowed in ; and in a few
years the debt was honestly paid.
In the first summer of Monroe's administration the attention of
the United States was directed to the little kingdom of Hayti in the
northern part of St. Domingo. Christophe, the sovereign of tlie
country, was anxious to secure from America a recognition of Hay-
tian independence ; for he feared that Louis XVIII. , the restored
Bourbon king of France, would reclaim Hayti as a part of the French
empire. The President met the overtures of Christophe with favor, and
an agent was sent out in the frigate Congress to conclude a treaty of"
commerce with the kingdom. But the Haytian authorities refused to
negotiate with an agent who was not regularly accredited as a minister
to an independent state; and the mission resulted in failure and dis-
appointment.
In September of the same year an important treaty was con-
cluded with the Indian nations of what was formerly the Northwestern
Territory. The tribes mostly concerned were the Wyandots, Dela-
wares, Senecas, and Shawnees ; but the Chippewas, Ottawas, and Pot-
tawattamies were also interested in the treaty. The subject discussed
was the cession, by purchase and otherwise, of various tracts of land,
mostly in Ohio. The Indian title to about four millions of acres, em-
bracing the valley of the Maumee, was extinguished by the payment
to the tribes concerned of fourteen thousand dollars in cash. Besides
this, the Dela wares were to receive an annuity of five hundred dollars ;
while to the Wyandots, Senecas, Shawnees and Ottawas was guaran-
teed the payment of ten thousand dollars annually forever. The
Chippewas and Pottawattamies received an annuity of three thousand
three hundred dollars for fifteen years. A reservation of certain tracts,
-amounting in the aggregate to about three hundred thousand acres,
was made by the Red men with the approval of the government. For
it was believed that the Indians, living in small districts surrounded
with American farms and villages, would abandon barbarism for the
27
418 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
habits of civilized life. But the sequel proved that the men of thfc
woods had no aptitude for such a change.
In December of 1817 the western portion of Mississippi Terri-
tory was organized as the State of Mississippi and admitted into the
Union. The new State contained an area of forty-seven thousand
square miles, and a population of sixty-five thousand souls. At the
same time the attention of the government was called to a nest of
buccaneers who had established themselves on Amelia Island, off the
north-eastern coast of Florida. One Gregor McGregor, acting under
a commission from the revolutionary authorities of New Granada and
Venezuela, had put himself at the head of a band of adventurers,
gathered mostly from Charleston and Savannah, and fortified the island
as a rendezvous of slave-traders and South American privateers. It
was thought by the audacious rascals that the well-known sympathy
of the United States for the Spanish American republics south of the
Isthmus of Darien would protect them from attack. They accord-
ingly proclaimed a blockade of St. Augustine and proceeded with their
business as though there was no civilized power in the world. But
the Federal government took a different view of the matter. An
armament was sent against the pirates, and the lawless establishment
was broken up. Another rendezvous of the same sort, on the island
of Galveston, oif the coast of Texas, was also suppressed.
In the first year of Monroe's administration the question of inter-
nal improvements began to be much agitated. The territorial vastness
of the country made it necessary to devise suitable means of communi-
cation between the distant parts. Without railroads and canals it was
evident that the products of the great interior could never reach a
market. Had Congress a right to vote money to make the needed
improvements? Jefferson and Madison had both answered the ques-
tion in the negative. Monroe held similar views; and a majority of
Congress voted against the proposed appropriations. In one instance,
however, a bill was passed appropriating the means necessary for the
construction of a national road across the Alleghanies, from Cumber-
land to Wheeling. The question of internal improvements was then
referred to the several States ; and New York took the lead by con-
structing a splendid canal from Buffalo to Albany, a distance of three
hundred and sixty-three miles. The cost of this important work was
more than seven and a half million dollars, and the eight years of
Monroe's administration were occupied in completing it.
In the latter part of 1817 the Seminole Indians on the frontiers of
Georgia and Alabama became hostile. Some bad negroes and treacher-
3I0NR0E'S ADMINISTRATION. 419
ous Creeks joined the savages in their depredations. General Gaines^
commandant of a post on Flint River, was sent into the Seminole
country, but after destroying a few villages his forces were found in-
adequate to conquer the E,ed men. General Jackson was then ordered
to collect from the adjacent States a sufficient army and reduce the
Seminoles to submission. Instead of following his directions, that
stern and self-willed man mustered a thousand riflemen from West
Tennessee, and in the spring of 1818 overran the hostile country with
little opposition. The Indians were afraid to fight the man whom
they had named the Big Knife.
While engaged in this expedition against the Seminoles, Jackson
entered Florida and took possession of the Spanish post at St. Mark's.
He deemed it necessary to do so in order to succeed in suppressing
the savages. The Spanish troops stationed at St. Mark's were removed
to Pensacola; and two Englishmen, named Arbuthnot and Ambrister,^
who fell into Jackson's hands, were charged with inciting the Semi-
noles to insurrection, tried by a court-martial, and hanged. Jackson
then advanced against Pensacola, captured the town, besieged and took
the fortress of Barancas, at the entrance to the bay, and sent the Span-
ish authorities to Havana. These summary proceedings excited much
comment throughout the country. The enemies of General Jackson
condemned him in unmeasured terms; but the President and Con-
gress justified his deeds. A resolution of censure, introduced into the
House of Representatives, was voted down by a large majority. The
king of Spain complained much; but his complaint was unheeded.
Seeing that the defence of such a province would cost more than it
was worth, the Spanish monarch then proposed to cede the territory
to the United States. For this purpose negotiations were opened at
Washington City; and on the 22d of February, 1819, a treaty was
concluded by which East and West Florida and the outlying islands
were surrendered to the American government. In consideration of
the cession the United States agreed to relinquish all claim to the ter-
ritory of Texas and to pay to American citizens, for depredations com-
mitted by Spanish vessels, a sum not exceeding five million dollars.
By the same treaty the eastern boundary of Mexico was fixed at the
River Sabine.
The year 1819 was noted for a great financial crisis — the first of
many that have occurred to disturb and distress the country. With
the reorganization of the Bank of the United States in 1817, the im-
proved facilities for credit gave rise to many extravagant speculations,
generally conceived in dishonesty and carried on by fraud. The great
420 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
branch bank at Baltimore was especially infested by a band of unscru^
pulous speculators who succeeded, in connivance with the officers, in
withdrawing from the institution fully two millions of dollars beyond
its securities. President Cheves, however, of the superior Board of
Directors, adopted a policy which exposed the prevailing rascality,
and by putting an end to the system of unlimited credits, gradually
restored the business of the country to a firmer basis. But, for the
time being, financial affairs were thrown into confusion; and the
Bank of the United States itself was barely saved from suspension
and bankruptcy.
Monroe's administration was noted for the great number of new
members which were added to the Union. In 1818, Illinois, the
twenty-first State, embracing an area of more than fifty-five thousand
square miles, was organized and admitted. The population of the
new commonwealth was forty-seven thousand. In December of the
following year Alabama was added, with a population of a hundred
and twenty-five thousand, and an area of nearly fifty-one thousand
square miles. About the same time Arkansas Territory was organ-
ized out of the southern portion of the Territory of Missouri. Early
in 1820 the province of Maine, which had been under the jurisdic-
diction of Massachusetts since 1652, was separated from that govern-
ment and admitted into the Union. At the time of admission the
lx)pulation of the new State had reached two hundred and ninety-
eight thousand ; and its territory embraced nearly thirty-two thou-
sand square miles. In August of 1821 the great State of Missouri,
with an area of sixty-seven thousand square miles, and a population
of seventy-four thousand, was admitted as the twenty-fourth member
of the Union ; but the admission was attended with a political agita-
tion so violent as to threaten the peace of the country.
The bill to organize Missouri as a territory was brought forward
in February of 1819. The institution of slavery had already been
planted there, and the question was raised in Congress whether the
new State should be admitted with the existing system of labor, or
whether by congressional action slave-holding should be prohibited.
On motion of James Tallmadge of New York a clause was inserted in
the territorial bill forbidding any further introduction of slaves into
Missouri and granting freedom to all slave-children on reaching the
age of twenty-five. The bill as thus amended became the organic
law of the territory. A few days afterwards when Arkansas was
presented for territorial organization, John W. Taylor of New York
moved the insertion of a clause similar to that in the Missouri bill;
MONROE'S ADMINISTRATION. 421
but the proposed amendment was voted down after a hot debate.
Taylor then made a motion that hereafter, in the organization of ter-
ritories out of the Louisiana purchase, slavery should be interdicted
in all that part north of the parallel of thirty-six degrees and thirty
minutes. This proposition was also lost after a very excited discus-
sion. Meanwhile, Tallmadge's amendment to the Missouri bill was
defeated in the Senate, and as a consequence both the new territories
were organized without restrictions in the matter of slavery.
When the bill to admit Missouri as a State was finally, in Jan-
uary of 1820, brought before Congress, the measure was opposed by
those who had desired the exclusion of slavery. But at that time the
new Free State of Maine was asking for admission into the Union ;
and those who favored slavery in Missouri determined to exclude
Maine unless Missouri should also be admitted. After another angry
debate, which lasted till the 16th of February, the bill coupling the
two new States together was actually passed ; and then Senator Thomas
of Illinois made a motion that henceforth and forever slavery should
be excluded from all that part of the Louisiana cession — Missouri
excepted — lying north of the parallel of thirty-six degrees and thirty
minutes. Such was the celebrated Missouri Compromise, one of the
most important acts of American legislation — a measure chiefly sup-
ported by the genius, and carried through Congress by the persistent
eiForts, of Henry Clay. The principal conditions of the plan were
these : first, the admission of Missouri as a slave-holding State ; sec-
ondly, the division of the rest of the Louisiana purchase by the par-
allel of thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes; thirdly, the admission
of new States, to be formed out of the territory south of that line, with
or without slavery, as the people might determine ; fourthly, the pro-
hibition of slavery in all the new States to be organized out of terri-
tory north of the dividing-line. By this compromise the slavery agi-
tation was allayed until 1849.
Meanwhile, the country had measurably recovered from the
effects of the late war. With peace and plenty the resources of the
nation were rapidly augmented. Toward the close of his term the
President's administration grew into high favor with the people ; and
in the fall of 1820 he was re-elected with great unanimity. As Vice-
President, Mr. Tompkins was also chosen for a second term. Scarcely
had the excitement over the admission of Missouri subsided when the
attention of the government was called to an alarming system of
piracy which had sprung up in the West Indies. Early in 1822 the
American frigate Congress, accompanied with eight smaller vessels.
422 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
•was sent thither; and in the course of the year more than twenty
piratical ships were captured. In the following summer Commodore
Porter was despatched with a larger fleet to cruise about Cuba and
the neighboring islands. Such v/as his vigilance that the retreats of
the sea-robbers were completely broken up; not a pirate was left
afloat.
At this time the countries of South America were disturbed
with many revolutions. From the days of Pizarro these states had
been dependencies of European monarchies. !N^ow they declared their
independence, and struggled to maintain it by force of arms. The
people of the United States, having achieved their own liberty, nat-
urally sympathized with the patriots of the South. Mr. Clay urged
upon the government the duty of giving official recognition to the
South American republics. At last his views prevailed ; and in March
of 1822 a bill was passed by Congress recognizing the new states as
sovereign nations. In the following year this action was followed up
by the President with a vigorous message, in which he declared that
for the future the American continents were not to he considered as sub-
jects for colonization by any European power. This famous declara-
tion constitutes what has ever since been known in the politics and
diplomacy of the United States as the Monroe Doctrine — a doc-
trine by which the entire Western hemisphere is consecrated to free
institutions.
Great was the joy of the American people in the summer of
1824. The venerated La Fayette, now aged and gray, returned once
more to visit the land for whose freedom he had shed his blood. The
honored patriots who had fought by his side came forth to greet him.
The younger heroes crowded around him. In every city, and on
every battle-field which he visited, he was surrounded by a throng of
shouting freemen. His journey through the country was a triumph.
It was a solemn and sacred moment when he stood alone by the grave
of Washington. Over the dust of the great dead the patriot of
France paid the homage of his tears. In September of 1825 he bade
a final adieu to the people who had made him their guest, and then
sailed for his native land. At his departure, the frigate Brandy-
wine — a name significant for him — was prepared to bear him away.
While Liberty remains to cheer the West, the name of La Fayette
shall be hallowed.
Before the departure of the illustrious Frenchman another pres-
idential election had been held. It was a time of great excitement
and much division of sentiment. Four candidates were presented for
ADAMS'S ADMINISTRATION.
423
the suflfrages of the people. There was an appearance of sectionalism
in the canvass. John Quincy Adams was put forward as the candi-
date of the East;
William H. Craw-
ford of Georgia as
the choice of the
South ; Henry Clay
and Andrew Jack-
son as the favorites
of the West. Nei-
ther candidate re-
ceived a majority of
the electoral votes,
and for the second
time in the history
of the government
the choice of Presi-
dent was referred to
the House of Rep-
resentatives. By
that body Mr. Ad-
ams was duly elec-
ted. For Vice-
T> • J J. T 1. i^ LA FAYETTE.
President, John C.
Calhoun of South Carolina had been chosen by the electoral college.
CHAPTER LIII.
ADAMS'S ADMINISTRATION, 18S5-1829.
THE new President was inaugurated on the 4th of March, 1825.
He was a man of the highest attainments in literature and states-
manship. At the age of eleven years he accompanied his father, John
Adams, to Europe. At Paris and Amsterdam and St. Petersburg the
son continued his studies, and at the same time became acquainted
with the manners and politics of the Old World. The vast opportu-
nities of his youth were improved to the fullest extent. In his riper
years he served his country as ambassador to the Netherlands, Portu-
424 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
gal, Prussia, Russia and England. Such were his abilities in the field
of diplomacy as to elicit from Washington the extraordinary praise of
being the ablest minister of which America could boast. His life, from
1794 till 1817, was devoted almost wholly to diplomatical services at
the various European capitals. At that critical period when the rela-
tions of the United States with foreign nations were as yet not well
established, his genius secured the adoption of treaty after treaty in
which the interests of his country were guarded with patriotic vigi-
lance. In 1806 he was honored with the professorship of Rhetoric
and Belles-Lettres at Harvard College of which he was an alumnus.
He had also held the office of United States senator from Massachu-
setts; and on' the accession of Monroe to the presidency was chosen
secretary of state. To the presidential chair he brought the wisdom
of mature years, great experience and unusual ability.
The new administration was an epoch of peace and prosperity in
the country ; but the spirit of party manifested itself with much vio-
lence. The adherents of General Jackson and Mr. Crawford united
in opposition to the policy of the President; and there was a want of
unanimity between the different departments of the government. In
the Senate the political friends of Mr. Adams were in a minority,
and their majority in the lower House only lasted for one session.
In his inaugural address the President strongly advocated the doc-
trine of internal improvements ; but the adverse views of Congress
prevented his recommendations from being adopted.
For a quarter of a century a difficulty had existed between the
government of the United States and Georgia in respect to the lands
held in that State by the Creek Indians. When, in 1802, Georgia
relinquished her claim to Mississippi Territory, the general govern-
ment agreed to purchase and surrender to the State all the Creek
lands lying within her own borders. This pledge on the part of the
United States had never been fulfilled, and Georgia complained of
bad faith. The difficulty became alarming ; but finally, in March of
1826, a treaty was concluded between the Creek chiefs and the Pres-
ident, by which a cession of all their lands in Georgia was obtained.
At the same time the Creeks agreed to remove to a new home beyond
the Mississippi.
On the 4th of July, 1826 — just fifty years to a day after the Dec-
laration of Independence — the venerable John Adams, second Presi-
dent of the United States, and his successor, Thomas Jefferson, both
died. Both had lifted their voices for freedom in the early and per-
ilous days of the Revolution. One had written and both had signed
18S5
29
33
37
Charles X.
George IV,
Frederick Wil liam III. |
27. Acknowl edgment of the independ ence of Greece.
28. Abo
30. French Revolu
Louis
lition of the " Test Act."
30. Polish Revolu
31. Fall of
32. Pas
30. Williamliv.
tion and election of
Philippe.
tion.
Warsaw.
sage of the Great Reform
40.
37. Attempted captur
39. Supp
40.'
bill by Parliament.
37. Victoria.
John Q. Adams,
25. Controversy concern
26. John Adams
26. Thomas Jeff
John C. Calh
28. Gr
President,
ing the lands of the Creek
Andrew Jack
The
d, July 4.
erson d. July 4.
OUn, Vice-President.
32. The
eat political excitement
Calhoun re-elected
32.Grea
32. The
32. Proc
Indians.
son, President.
36. Ar
Black Hawk War.
Jackson re-elected
35. Seminole
bill to recharter the Uni
throughout the country.
35. Removal
Vice-President.
t tariff excitement,
doctrine of nullification de
lamation by the President.
Martin Van Buren,
33. Passage of Mr. Clay's
33. Removal of Govern
San Antonio
36.
36.
taken
TEX
MEXICO.
Santa Anna, President.
36. The
37. Michigan admitt
kansas admitted into
President.
War.
Martin Van I
ted States Bank vetoed
37. Failure of the Si
of the Cherokees.
40.1
clared by South Carolii
Vice-President.
Compromise bill.
Richard M. J(i
ment funds from the T
37. Financial crisis.
by the Texans.
The Alamo.
AS INDEPENDEN
38. Lamar, Pr
San Jacinto,
38. Vera Cruz be
"Central Republic" d.
37. Bustamente, Pr
41
ederick William IV.
Madrid by Don Carlos.
ion of the Carlists in Sp
body of Napoleon return
43
48. Ou
46. Election of Pius
48. Re
48. A
48. Lo
ain.
ed to France.
49
tbreak of the Hungarian
IX. 52. Fall
volution in France. ga
republic proclaimed.
uis Napoleou Bonapa
52. Lo
dent
52. Lo
33
into the Union.
43. The Dorr
Union.
44. First
41. The Webster- Ashbur-
ton treaty.
reil, President.
the President,
treasury bill.
William H. Har
(Died April 4,
sage of the Treasury bill.
41. Treasury bill repealed.
41. Passage of the Bankru
41. Veto of the United Sta
and resignation of the
dent's Cabinet.
nSOIl, Vice-President,
ted States bank.
John Tyler, vice-
and President from April,
,tl. Houston, President,
ient.
James K. Polk,
45. Florida admitted into
rebellion in Rhode Island.
46. Iowa admitted
telegraph line in the Uni
48. Wis
46. Thenorth-weste
46. General Taylor
46. Congress declar
46.
,1 mPaloAlto.
46. m MResaca de
46.
46.
|| ml Capture of
hjl3Ionterei/.
George M. Dallas,
48. Dis
rison. President.
1841.)
47. m|lljBue
pt law. (i^^M
tes Bank, ¥4X1
Presi- 47. I>I(A Ver
47. ff II Cer
11. Santa Anna, Presid
jed by the French.
ired.
ient.
President,
1841.
47.
47. f
Con
JIol
Cha
47.
47. t^^Fall
48. Tre
45. Texas admitted into
ent.
Revolution.
of Kossuth and the Hun-
rian cause.
rte elected President.
uis Napoleon, Presi-
for ten years.
uis Napoleon, Emperor.
54. The Crimean War.
President,
the Union.
Zacliary Taylor,
(Died Julv 9,
into the Union.
ted States.
cousin admitted into the
rn boundary fixed at 49°.
ordered to the Rio Grande,
es war against Mexico.
la Palma.
3Iatanioras.
Vice-President.
covery of gold in Californ
Millard Fillmo
President from
na Vista.
a Cruz.
51. The Fugi
ro Gordo.
50. Utah erected into
treras.
ino del Hey.
49. New Mexico erected
pultepec.
of Mexico.
aty of peace with Mexico,
the Union.
50. The " Omnibus
50. California adm
President.
1850.)
Fr'nkliii Pierce,
Union. [President.
54. Treaty with Ja-
pan.
54. Passage of the
Kansas and
Nebraska bill.
54. The Missouri
Compromise rei)eaied.
is. 54. Troubles in
Kansas.
re, Vice-President, and
July, 1850.
W. R. King, Vice-Pres.
tive Slave Jaw passed.
a Territorial government.
into a Territorial govern-
ment.
• Bill " passed,
itted into the Union.
ADAMS'S ADMINISTRATION. 425
the great Declaration. Both had lived to see their country's independ-
ence. Both had served that country in its highest official station. Both
had reached extreme old age : Adams was ninety ; Jefferson, eighty-
two. Now, while the cannon were booming for the fiftieth birthday
of the nation, the gray and honored patriots passed, almost at the same
hour, from among the living.
In the following September, William Morgan, a resident of
Western New York, having threatened to publish the secrets of
the Masonic fraternity, of which he was a member, suddenly disap-
peared from his home, and was never heard of afterward. The Ma-
sons fell under the suspicion of having abducted and murdered him.
A great clamor was raised against them in New York, and the ex-
citement extended to other parts of the country. The issue between
the Masons and their enemies became a political one, and many emi-
nent men were embroiled in the controversy. For several years the
anti-Masonic party exercised a considerable influence in the elections
of the country. De Witt Clinton, one of the most prominent and
valuable statesmen of New York, had to suffer much, in loss of repu-
tation, from his membership in the order. His last days were clouded
with the odium which for the time being attached to the Masonic
name.
In the congressional debates of 1828 the question of the tariff
was much discussed. By a tariff is understood a duty levied on im-
ported goods. The object of the same is twofold : first, to produce a
revenue for the government ; and secondly, to raise the price of the
article on which the duty is laid, in order that the domestic manu-
facturer of the thing taxed may be able to compete with the foreign
producer. When the duty is levied for the latter purpose, it is called
a protective tariff. Whether it is sound policy for a nation to have
protective duties is a question which has been much debated in all
civilized countries. Mr. Adams and his friends decided in favor of
a tariff; and in 1828 the duties on fabrics made of wool, cotton, linen
and silk, and those on articles manufactured of iron^ lead, etc., were
much increased. The object of such legislation was to stimulate the
manufacturing interests of the country. The question of the tariff
has always been a sectional issue. The people of the Eastern and
Middle States, where factories abound, have favored protective du-
ties ; while in the agricultural regions of the South and West such
duties have been opposed.
The administration of John Quincy Adams was the beginning
of a new epoch in the history of the United States. The Revolution-
426 HISTORY OF TEE UNITED STATES.
ary sages had gradually fallen out of the ranks of leadership; and the
influences of the Revolution were not any longer distinctly felt in the
decision of national questions. Even the war of 1812, with its bitter
party antagonisms, its defeats and victories, and its absurd ending, was
fading out of memory. New dispositions and tastes arose among the
people ; new issues confronted the public ; new methods prevailed in
the halls of legislation. Old party lines could no longer be traced;
old party names were reduced to a jargon. Already the United States
had surpassed in growth and development the sanguine expectations
of the fathers. But the conflicting oj^inions and interests of the na-
tion, reflected in the stormy debates of Congress, gave cause for con-
stant anxiety and alarm.
With the fall of 1828 came another presidential election. The
contest was specially exciting. Mr. Adams, supported by Mr. Clay,
the secretary of state, was put forward for re-election. In accordance
with an understanding which had existed for several years. General
Jackson appeared as the candidate of the opposition. In the previ-
ous election Jackson had received more electoral votes than Adams;
but disregarding the popular preference, the House of Representa'
tives had chosen the latter. Now the people were determined to
have their way; and Jackson was triumphantly elected, receiving a
hundred and seventy-eight electoral votes againstjeighty-three for
his opponent. As soon as the election was over, the excitement —
as usual in such cases — abated ; and the thoughts of the people were
turned to other subjects.
CHAPTER LIV.
JACKSON'S ADMINISTRATION 18S9-18S7.
THE new President was a native of North Carolina, born on the
Waxhaw, March 15th, 1767. His belligerent nature broke out in
boyhood, and his mother's plan of devoting him to the ministry was
hopelessly defeated. At the age of thirteen he was under arms and
witnessed Sumter's defeat at Hanging Rock. He was captured by the
British, maltreated, and left to die of smallpox; but his mother se-
cured his release from prison and his life was saved. After the Revo-
lution he began the study of law, and at the age of twenty-one went
JACKSON'S ADMINISTRATION.
427
to Nashville. In 1796 he was elected to the House of Representatives
from the new State of Tennessee. Here his turbulent and willful dis-
position manifested itself in full force. During the next year he was
promoted to the Senate, where he remained a year, without making a
speech or easting a
vote. He
siarned his
then re-
.^....v^ ^ seat and
returned home. His
subsequent career is a
part of the history of
the country, more par-
ticularly of the South-
west with which sec-
tion his name was
identified. He came
to the presidential of-
fice as a military hero.
But he was more than
that: a man of great
native powers and in-
flexible honesty.
His talents were
strong but unpol-
ished ; his integrity
unassailable; his will
like iron. He was
one o f those men
for whom no toils are too arduous, no responsibility too great. His
personal character was strongly impressed upon his administration.
Believing that the public affairs would be best conducted by such
means, he removed nearly seven hundred office-holders, and appointed
in their stead his own political friends. In defence of such a course
the precedent established by Mr. Jefferson was pleaded.
In his first annual message the President took strong grounds
against rechartering the Bank of the United States. Believing that
institution to be both inexpedient and unconstitutional, he recom-
mended that the old charter should be allowed to expire by its own
limitation in 1836. But the influence of the bank, with its many
branches, was very great; and in 1832 a bill to recharter was brought
before Congress and passed. To this measure the President opposed
his veto; and since a two-thirds majority in favor of the bill could not
ANDREW JACKSON.
428 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
be secured, the proposition to grant a new charter failed, and the bank
ceased by the original limitation.
It was in the early part of Jackson's administration that the
partisan elements of the country, which for some years had been
whirling about in a chaotic condition, was resolved into the two great
factions of Whig and Democratic — a form which remained as the es-
stablished order in politics for a quarter of a century. The old Fed-
eral party, under whose auspices the government was organized, had
lost control of national affairs on the retirement of John Adams from
the presidency. Still the party lingered, opposed the war of 1812, and
became odious from its connection with the Hartford Convention. In
1820 only enough of the old organization remained to be severely
handled in the great debates on the Missouri Compromise. Then fol-
lowed, during Monroe's second term, what is known in American po-
litical history as the Era op Good Feeling. Partisanship seemed
ready to expire. On the other side, the line of political descent had
begun with the anti-Federalists who after opposing the National consti-
tution and the administrative policy of Washington and Adams, became
under the name of Republicans the champions of France as against
Great Britain. But this name was soon exchanged for that of Demo-
crats; and under that title the party came into power with the admin-
istration of Jefferson. Then followed the administrations of Madison,.
Monroe, and John Quincy Adams under the same political banner.
But in the case of Adams the new forces were already at work. When
Jackson became President his arbitrary measures alarmed the country
and drove all the elements of the opposition into a compact phalanx
under the leadership of Clay and Webster. To this new party organi-
zation the name of Whig was given — a name taken from the old
Scotch Covenanters and English republicans of the seventeenth cen-
tury, worn by the patriots of the American Revolution to distinguish
them from the Tories, and now adopted as the permanent title of the
opponents of Jeffersonian Democracy.
The reopening of the tariff question occasioned great excitement
in Congress and throughout the country. In the session of 1831-32
additional duties were levied upon manufactured goods imported from^
■abroad. By this act the manufacturing districts were again favored
at the expense of the agricultural States. South Carolina was spe-
cially offended. A great convention of her people was held, and it
was resolved that the tariff-law of Congress was unconstitutional, and
therefore null and void. Open resistance was threatened in case the
officers of the government should attempt to collect the revenues in
JACKSON'S ADMINISTRATION.
429
the harbor of Charleston. In the United States Senate the right of a
State, under certain circumstances, to nullify an act of Congress was
boldly proclaimed. On that issue occurred the famous debate be-
tween the eloquent Colonel Hayne, senator from South Carolina, and
Daniel Webster
of Massachusetts, per-
haps the greatest mas-
ter of American ora-
tory. The former ap-
peared as the cham-
pion of State rights,
and the latter as the
advocate of constitu-
tional supremacy.
But the question
was not decided by
debate. The Presi-
dent took the matter
in hand and issued a
proclamation denying
the right of any State
to nullify the laws of
Congress. But Mr.
•Calhoun, the Vice-
President, resigned his
office to accept a seat in the Senate, where he might better defend
the doctrines of his State. The President, having warned the people
of South Carolina against pursuing those doctrines further, ordered a
body of troops under General Scott to proceed to Charleston, and also
sent thither a man-of-war. At this display of force the leaders of the
nullifying party quailed and receded from their position. Bloodshed
was happily avoided ; and in the following spring the excitement was
allayed by a compromise. Mr. Clay brought forward and secured the
passage of a bill providing for a gradual reduction of the duties
complained of until, at the end of ten years, they should reach the
standard demanded by the South.
In the spring of 1832 the Sac, Fox and Winnebago Indians of
Wisconsin Territory began a war. They were incited and led by the
famous chief Black Hawk, who, like many great sachems before him,
believed in the possibility of an Indian confederacy sufficiently pow-
erful to beat back the whites. The lands of the Sacs and Foxes.
DANIEL WEBSTER.
430 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
lying in the Rock Riv^er country of Illinois, had been purchased by
the government twenty-five years previously. The Indians, however,
remained in the ceded territory, since there was no occasion for im-
mediate occupation by the whites. When at last, after a quarter of a
century, the Indians were required to give possession, they caviled at
the old treaty, and refused to comply. The government insisted that
the Red men should fulfill their contract, and hostilities began on the
frontier. The governor of Illinois called out the militia, and General
Scott was sent with nine companies of artillery to Chicago. At that
place his force was overtaken with the cholera, and he was prevented
from co-operating with the troops of General Atkinson. The latter,
however, waged a vigorous campaign against the Indians, defeated
them in several actions, and made Black Hawk prisoner. The cap--
tive chieftain was taken to Washington and the great cities of the
East, where his understanding was opened as to the power of the
nation against which he had been foolish enough to lift his hatchet.
Returning to his own people, he advised them that resistance was
hopeless. The warriors then abandoned the disputed lands and re-
tired into Iowa.
Difficulties also arose with the Cherokees of Georgia. These
were the most civilized and humane of all the Indian nations. They
had adopted the manners of the whites. They had pleasant farms,
goodly towns, schools, printing-presses, a written code of laws. The
government of the United States had given to Georgia a pledge to
purchase the Cherokee lands for the benefit of the State. The pledge
was not fulfilled ; the authorities of Georgia grew tired of waiting
for the removal of the Indians ; and the legislature passed a statute by
which the government of the Red men was abrogated and the laws of
the State extended over the Indian domain. With singular illiberal-
ity, it was at the same time enacted that the Cherokees and Creeks
should not have the use of the State courts or the protection of the laws.
This code, however, was declared unconstitutional by the supreme court
of the United States. The Indians then appealed to the President for
help ; but he refused to interpose between them and the laws of Geor-
gia. He also recommended the removal of the Cherokees to lands be-
yond the Mississippi ; and with this end in view, the Indian Terri-
tory was organized in the year 1834. The Indians yielded with great
reluctance. More than five million dollars were paid them for their
lands ; but still they clung to their homes. At last General Scott
was ordered to remove them to the new territory, using force if
necessary to accomplish the work. The years 1837-38 were oc-
JACKSON'S ADMINISTRATION. 431
cupied with the final transfer of the Cherokees to their homes in
the West.
More serious still was the conflict with the Seminoles of Florida.
The trouble arose from an attempt on the part of the government to
remove the tribe to a new domain beyond the Mississippi. Hostili-
ties began in 1835, and continued for four years. The chief of the
Seminoles was Osceola, a half-breed of great talents and audacity. He
and Micanopy, another chieftain, denied the validity of a former treaty
by which the Seminole lands had been ceded to the government. So
haughty was the bearing of Osceola that General Thompson, the agent
of the government in Florida, arrested him and put him in irons.
The red warrior dissembled his purpose, gave his assent to the old
treaty, and was liberated. As might have been foreseen, he immedi-
ately entered into a conspiracy to slaughter the whites and devastate
the country.
At this time the interior of Florida was held by General Clinch,
who had his headquarters at Fort Drane, seventy-five miles south-west
from St. Augustine. The post was considered in danger; and Majoi
Dade with a hundred and seventeen men was despatched from Fort
Brooke, at the head of Tampa Bay, to reinforce General Clinch. After
marching about half the distance, Dade's forces fell into an ambus-
cade, and were all massacred except one man who was left alive un-
der a heap of the dead. On the same day Osceola, with a band of
warriors, prowling around Fort King, on the Ocklawaha, surrounded
a storehouse where General Thompson was dining with a company of
friends. The savages poured in a murderous fire, and then rushed
forward and scalped the dead before the garrison of the fort, only
two hundred and fifty yards away, could bring assistance. General
Thompson's body was pierced by fifteen balls ; and four of his nine
companions were killed.
On the 31st of December General Clinch fought a battle with
the Indians on the banks of the Withlacoochie. The savages were
repulsed, but Clinch thought it prudent to retreat to Fort Drane. In
the following February General Scott took command of the American
forces in Florida. On the 29th of the same month General Gaines,
who was advancing from the West with a force of a thousand men
for the relief of Fort Drane, was attacked near the battle-field where
Clinch had fought. The Seminoles made a furious onset, but were
repulsed with severe losses. In May some straggling Creeks who
still remained in the country began hostilities ; but they were soon
subdued and compelled to seek their reservation beyond the Missis-
432 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
sippi. In October of 1836 Governor Call of Florida marched with
a force of two thousand men against the Indians of the interior. A
division of his army overtook the enemy in the Wahoo Swamp, a
short distance from the scene of Dade's massacre. A battle ensued,
and the Indians were driven into the Everglades with considerable
losses. Soon afterward another engagement was fought on nearly the
same ground; and again the savages were beaten, though not deci-
sively. The remainder of the history of the Seminole War belongs
to the following administration.
In the mean time the President had given a final quietus to
the Bank of the United States. After vetoing the bill to recharter
that institution, he conceived that the surplus funds which had accu-
mulated in its vaults would be better distributed among the States.
He had no warrant of law for such a step; but believing himself to
be in the right, he did not hesitate to take the responsibility. Ac-
cordingly, in October of 1833, he ordered the accumulated funds of
the great bank, amounting to about ten million dollars, to be distri-
buted among certain State banks designated for that purpose. This
action on the part of the President was denounced by the opposition
as a measure of incalculable mischief — unwarranted, arbitrary, dan-
gerous. In the Senate a powerful coalition, headed by Calhoun, Clay,
and Webster, was formed against the President; and the new officers,
who had been appointed to carry out his measures, were rejected. A
resolution censuring his conduct was then introduced and carried; but
a similar proposition failed in the House of Representatives. For a
while there was a general cry of indignation, and it seemed that the
administration would be overwhelmed; but the President, ever as
fearless as he was self-willed and stubborn, held on his course, un-
moved by the clamor. The resolution of censure stood upon the jour-
nal of the Senate for four years and was then expunged from the
record through the influence of Senator Thomas H. Benton of Mis-
souri. The financial panic of 1836-7, following soon after the
removal of the funds, was attributed by the opponents of the admin-
istration to the President's arbitrary action and the prospective des-
truction of the national bank. To these strictures the adherents of
his own party replied that the financial distress of the country was
attributable to the bank itself, which was declared to be an institution
too powerful and despotic to exist in a free government. The Presi-
dent was but little concerned with the excitement: he had just en-
tered on his second term, with Martin Van Buren for Vice-President
instead of Mr. Calhoun.
In 1834 the strong will of the chief magistrate was brought into
I
O
o
>
H
:^
SiS
H
O
'^
(433)
JACKSON'S ADAIINISTBATION. 43&
conflict with France. The American government held an old claim
against that country for damages done to the commerce of the United
States in the wars of Napoleon. In 1831 the French king had agreed
to pay five million dollare for the alleged injuries; but the dilatory
government of France postponed and neglected the payment until
the President, becoming wrathful, recommended to Congress to make
reprisals on French commerce, and at the same time directed the
American minister at Paris to demand his passports and come home.
These measures had the desired effect, and the indemnity was promptly
paid. The government of Portugal was brought to terms in a similar
manner.
The country, though flourishing, was not without calamities.
Several eminent statesmen fell by the hand of death. On the 4th of
July, 1831, ex-President Monroe passed away. Like Jefferson and
Adams, he sank to rest amid the rejoicings of the national anniver-
sary. In the following year- Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the last
surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, died at the age,
of ninety-six. A short time afterward Philip Freneau, the poet of
the Revolution, departed from the land of the living. The patriot
bard had reached the age of eighty. On the 24th of June, 1833, John
Handolph of Roanoke died in Philadelphia. He was a man admired
for his talents, dreaded for his wit and sarcasm, and respected for his-
integrity as a statesman. In 1835 Chief- Justice Marshall breathed
his last, at the age of fourscore years ; and in the next year ex-Pres-
ident Madison, worn with the toils of eighty-five years, passed away.
To these losses of life must be added two great disasters to property.
On the 16th of December, 1835, a fire broke out in the lower part
of New York City and laid thirty acres of buildings in ashes. Five
hundred and twenty-nine houses and property valued at eighteen
million dollars were consumed. Just one year afterward the Patent
Office and Post-Office at Washington were destroyed in the same
manner. But upon the ruins of these valuable buildings, more noble
and imposing structures were soon erected.
Jackson's administration was signalized by the addition of two
new States. In June of 1836 Arkansas was admitted, with an area
of fifty-two thousand square miles, and a population of seventy thou-
sand. In January of the following year Michigan Territory was
oriranized as a State and added to the Union. The new common-
wealth brought a population of a hundred and fifty-seven thousand,
and an area of fifty-six thousand square miles. The administration
was already within two months of its close. The President, follow-
ing the example of Washington, issued a patriotic farewell address.
436 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The dangers of discord and sectionalism among the States were set
forth with all the masculine energy of the Jacksonian dialect. The
people of the United States were again solemnly warned, as they had
been by the Father of his Country, against the baleful influence of
demagogues. The horrors of disunion were portrayed in the strong-
est colors ; and people of every rank and section were exhorted to
maintain and defend the American Union as they would the last
fortress of human liberty. This was the last of those remarkable
public papers contributed by Andrew Jackson to the history of his
country. Already, in the autumn of the previous year, Martin Van
Buren had been elected President. The opposing candidate was Gen-
eral Harrison of Ohio, who received the support of the new Whig
party. As to the vice-presidency, no one secured a majority in the
electoral college, and the choice devolved on the Senate. By that
body Colonel Richard M. Johnson of Kentucky was duly elected.
CHAPTER LV.
VAN BUREN' S ADMINISTRATION, 1837-1S41.
MARTIN VAN BUREN, eighth President of the United States,
was born at Kinderhook, New York, on the 5th of December,
1782. After receiving a limited education he became a student of
law, and before reaching his majority was recognized as an influential
democratic politician. In his thirtieth year he was elected to the
Senate of his native State ; and six years afterwards, by supplanting
De Witt Clinton, became the recognized leader of the Democracy in
New York. In 1821, and again in 1827, he was chosen United States
Senator ; but in the following year he resigned his office to accept the
governorship of his native State. He also, in 1831, resigned his
place as secretary of State in the first cabinet of President Jackson,
and was appointed minister to England. But when, in December of
the same year, his nomination was submitted to the Senate the influence
of Vice-President Calhoun assisted by the Whig leaders. Clay and
Webster, procured the rejection of the appointment. Mr. Van Buren
returned from his unfulfilled mission ; became the candidate for the
vice-presidency, and was elected in the fall of 1832. Four years
later he was called by the voice of the powerful party to which he be-
longed, to succeed General Jackson in the highest office of the nation.
VAN BUREN'S ADMINISTRATION. 437
One of the first duties of the new administration was to finish the
Seminole War. In the beginning of 1837 the command of the army irk
Florida was transferred from General Scott to General Jessup. In the^
following fall Osceola came to the American camp with a flag of truce ;
but he was suspected of treachery, seized, and sent a prisoner to Fort
Moultrie, where he died in 1838. The Seminoles, though disheartened
by the loss of their chief, continued the war. In December Colonel
Zachary Taylor, with a force of over a thousand men, marched into the
Everglades of Florida, determined to fight the savages in their lairs.
After unparalleled sufferings he overtook them, on Christmas day, near
Lake Okeechobee. A hard battle was fought, and the Indians were de-
feated, but not until a hundred and thirty-nine of the whites had fallen.
For more than a year Taylor continued to hunt the Ked men through the
swamps. In 1839 the chiefs sent in their submission and signed a treaty;
but their removal to the West was made with much reluctance and delay.
In the first year of Van Buren's administration the country was afflicted
with a monetary panic of the most serious character. The preceding years
had been a time of great prosperity. The national debt was entirely liqui-
dated, and a surplus of nearly forty million dollars had accumulated in
the treasury of the United States. By act of Congress this vast sum had
been distributed among the several States. Owing to the abundance of
money, speculations of al 1 sorts grew rife. The credit system pervaded every
department of business. The banks of the country were suddenly multi-
plied to nearly seven hundred. Vast issues of irredeemable paper money
stimulated the speculative spirit and increased the opportunities for fraud.
The bills of these unsound banks were receivable at the land-offices ;
and settlers and speculators made a rush to secure the public lands while
money was plentiful. Seeing that in receiving such an unsound currency
in exchange for the national domain the government was likely to be
defrauded out of millions, President Jackson had issued an order called
THE Specie Circular, by which the land-agents were directed hence-
forth to receive nothing but coin in payment for the lands. The effects
of this circular came upon the nation in the first year of Van Buren's
administration. The interests of the government had been secured by
Jackson's vigilance ; but the business of the country was prostrated by
the shock. The banks suspended specie payment. Mercantile houses
failed ; and disaster swept through every avenue of trade. During the
months of March and April, 1837, the failures in New York and New
Orleans amounted to about a hundred and fifty million dollars. A com-
mittee of business men from the former city besought the President to
rescind the specie circular and to call a special session of Congress. The
438 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
former request was refused and the latter complied with ; but not until
the executive was driven by the distresses of the country.
When Congress convened in the following September, several measures
•of relief were brought forward. A bill authorizing the issue of treasury
notes, not to exceed ten millions of dollars, was passed as a temporary ex-
pedient. More important by far was the measure proposed by the Presi-
dent and brought before Congress under the name of the Independent
Treasury Bill. By the provisions of this remarkable project the
public funds of the nation were to be kept on deposit in a treasury to be
established for that special purpose. It was argued by Mr. Van Buren
and his friends that the surplus money of the country would drift into
the independent treasury and lodge there ; and that by this means the
speculative mania would be eifectually checked; for extensive speculations
could not be carried on without an abundant currency. It was in the
nature of the President's plan to separate the business of the United States
from the general business of the country. »
The independent treasury bill was passed by the Senate, but de-
feated in the House of Representatives. But in the following regular
session of Congress the bill was again brought forward and adopted. In
the mean time, the business of the country had in a measure revived.
During the year 1838 most of the banks resumed specie payments.
Commercial affairs assumed their wonted aspect ; but trade M-as less
vigorous than before. Enterprises of all kinds languished, and the people
were greatly disheartened. Discontent prevailed ; and the administration
Avas blamed with everything.
In the latter part of 1837 there was an insurrection in Canada. A
portion of the people, dissatisfied with the British government, broke out
in revolt and attempted to establish their independence. The insurgents
found much sympathy and encouragement in the United States, especially
in New York. From that State a party of seven hundred men, taking
arms, seized and fortified Navy Island, in the Niagara River. The
loyalists of Canada attempted to capture the place, and failed. They suc-
ceeded, however, in firing the Caroline, the supply-ship of the adven-
turers, cut her moorings, and sent the burning vessel over Niagara Falls.
These events created considerable excitement, and the peaceful relations
of the United States and Great Britain were endangered. But the Presi-
dent issued a proclamation of neutrality, forbidding interference with the
affairs of Canada ; and General Wool ^^'as sent to the Niagara frontier
with a sufficient force to quell the disturbance and punish the disturbers.
The New York insurgents on Navy Island were obliged to surrender,
and order was soon restored.
VAN BUBEN'S ADMINISTRATION. 439
Hardly had the excitement attendant upon the Canadian troubles
subsided, before the question was raised as to Van Buren's successor
in the presidency. The canvass began early and in a very bitter
spirit. The measures of the administration had been of such a nature
as to call forth the fiercest political controversy. The Whigs, ani-
mated with the hope of victory, met in national convention on the 4th
of December, 1839, and again nominated General Harrison as their
leader in the coming contest. On the Democratic side Mr. Van Buren
had no competitor ; but the unanimity of his j^arty could hardly com-
pensate for his misfortunes and blunders. The canvass was the most
•exciting in the political history of the country. The President was
blamed with every thing. The financial distress was laid at his door.
Extravagance, bribery, corruption — every thing bad was charged upon
him. Men of business advertised to pay six dollars a barrel for flour
if Harrison should be elected ; three dollars a barrel if Van Buren
should be successful. The Whig orators tossed about the luckless ad-
ministration through all the figures and forms of speech; and the
President himself was shot at with every sort of dart that partisan wit
and malice could invent. The enthusiasm in the ranks of the oppo-
sition rose higher and higher; and the result was the defeat of the
Democrats in every State except Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri,
New Hampshire, Virginia, and South Carolina. The electoral votes
of these States — numbering sixty — were given to Van Buren; and
the remainder, amounting to two hundred and thirty-four, were cast
for General Harrison. After controlling the destinies of the govern-
ment for nearly forty years, the Democratic party was temporarily
routed. For Vice-President, John Tyler of Virginia was chosen.
In the last year of Van Buren's administration was completed the
■sixth census of the United States. The tables were, as usual, replete
with the evidences of growth and progress. The national revenues
for the year 1840 amounted to nearly twenty millions of dollars. Dur-
ing the last ten years the center of population had moved westward
along the thirty-ninth parallel of latitude from the South Fork of
the Potomac to Clarksburg, West Virginia — a distance of fifty-five
miles. The area of the United States now actually inhabited, amounted
to eight hundred and seven thousand square miles, being an increase
in ten years of twenty-seven and six-tenths per cent. The frontier
line, circumscribing the population, passed through Michigan, Wiscon-
sin, Iowa, and the western borders of Missouri, Arkansas, and Loui-
siana— a distance of three thousand three hundred miles. The popu-
lation had reached the aggregate of seventeen million souls, being an
440 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
increase since 1830 of more than six millions. It was found from the-
tables that eleven-twelfths of the people lived outside of the larger
cities and towns, showing the strong preponderance of the agricultural
over the manufacturing and commercial interest. One of the most
interesting lessons of the census was found in the fact that the wonderful
growth of the United States was in extent and area, and not in accu^
iiiulation — in the spread of civilization rather than in intensity. For,
isince 1830, the average population of the country had not increased
by so much as one person to the square mile !
The administration of Van Buren has generally been reckoned,
as unsuccessful and inglorious. But he and his times were unfortu-
nate rather than bad. He was the victim of all the evils which fol-
lowed hard upon the relaxation of the Jacksonian methods of govern-
ment. He had neither the will nor the disposition to rule as his
predecessor had done; nor were the people and their representatives
any longer in the humor to suffer that sort of government. The pe-
riod was unheroic : it was the ebb-tide between the belligerent excite-
ments of 1832 and the war with Mexico. The financial panic added
opprobrium to the popular estimate of imbecility in the government.
" The administration of Van Buren/' said a bitter satirist, " is like
a parenthesis: it may be read in a low tone of voice or altogether
omitted without injuring the sense ! " But the satire lacked one essen-
tial quality — truth.
CHAPTER LVI.
ADMINISTRATIONS OF HARRISON AND TYLER, I84I-IS45.
THE new President was a Virginian by birth, and the adopted son
of Robert Morris, the financier of the Revolution. He was a grad-
uate of Hampden-Sidney College, and afterward a student of medicine.
Attracted by the military life, he entered the army of St. Clair; was
rapidly promoted ; became lieutenant-governor and then governor of
Indiana Territory, which office he filled with great ability. His mil-
itary career in the North-west has already been narrated. He was
inaugurated President on the 4th of March, 1841, and began his
duties by issuing a call for a special session of Congress to consider
" sundry important matters connected with the finances of the coun-
try." An able cabinet was organized, at the head of which was Dan-
ADMINISTRATIONS OF HARRISON AND TYLER. 441
iel Webster as secretary of state. Everything promised well for the
new Whig administration ; but before Congress could convene, the
venerable President, bending under the weight of sixty-eight years,
fell sick, and died just one month after his inauguration. It was^
the first time that such a calamity had befallen the American peo-
ple. Profound and universal grief was manifested at the sad event.
On the 6th of April Mr. Tyler took the oath of office, and became
President of the United States.
He was a statesman of considerable distinction ; a native of Vir-
ginia ; a graduate of William and Mary College. At an early age he
left the profession of law to enter public life ; was chosen a member
of Congress; and in 1825 was elected governor of Virginia. From
that position he was sent to the Senate of the United States ; and now
at the age of fifty-one was called to the presidency. He had been
put upon the ticket with General Harrison through motives of expe-
diency ; for although a Whig in political principles, he was known to
be hostile to the United States Bank. And this hostility was soon to be
manifested in a remarkable manner.
The special session of Congress continued from May till Septem-
ber. One of the first measures proposed and carried was the repeal
of the independent treasury bill. A general bankrupt law was then
brought forward and passed, by which a great number of insolvent
business men were relieved from the disabilities of debt. The next
measure — a favorite scheme of the Whig-s — was the recharterine: of
the bank of the United States. The old charter had expired in 1836 ;
but the bank had continued in operation under the authority of the
State of Pennsylvania. Now a bill to recharter was brought forward
and passed. The President interposed his veto. Again the bill was
presented, in a modified form, and received the assent of both Houses,
only to be rejected by the executive. By this action a final rupture-
was produced between the President and the party which had elected
him. The indignant Whigs, baffied by a want of a two-thirds major-
ity in Congress, turned upon him with storms of invective. All the
members of the cabinet except Mr. Webster resigned ; and he retained
his place only because of a pending difficulty with Great Britain.
The difficulty was in the nature of a dispute about the north-
eastern boundary of the United States. The territorial limit of tlie
country in that direction, not having been clearly defined by the treaty
of 1783, had been one of the points under discussion by the commis-
sioners at Ghent in 1814. But like other matters presented for adju-
dication before that polite and easily satisfied congress, the boundary
442 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
question had been postponed rather than settled. It was then agrev,d,
however, to refer the establishment of the entire line between the
United States and Canada to the decision of three commissioners to be
jointly constituted by the two governments. The first of these bodies
accomplished its work successfully by awarding to the United States
the islands in the Bay of Passamaquoddy. The third commission
also performed its duty by establishing the true boundary line from
the intersection of the forty-fifth parallel of latitude with the River
St. Lawrence to the western point of Lake Huron. To the second
commission was assigned the more difficult task of settling the bound-
ary from the Atlantic to the St. Lawrence ; and this Avork they failed
to accomplish. For nearly twenty-five years the limit of the United
States on the northeast remained in controversy; and at times the dif-
ficulty became so serious as to endanger the peace of the two nations.
Finally the whole matter at issue was referred to Lord Ashburton,
acting on the part of Great Britain, and Mr. Webster, the American
Secretary of State. After an able discussion of all the points in dis-
pute, the boundary was definitely established as follows: From the
mouth of the River St. Croix ascending that stream to its western
fountain; from that fountain due north to the St. John's; thence with
that river to its source on the watershed between the Atlantic and
the St. Lawrence; thence in a southwesterly direction along the crest
of the highlands to the northwestern source of the Connecticut; and
down that stream to and along the forty-fifth parallel to the St. Law-
rence. The work of the commissioners extended also to the estab-
lishment of the boundary from the western point of Lake Huron
through Lake Superior to the northwestern extremity of the Lake of
Woods, thence — confirming the treaty of October, 1818, — southward
to the forty-ninth parallel of latitude, and thence with that parallel to
the Rocky Mountains. This important settlement, known as the Web-
-STER-AsHBURTON Treaty, was completed on the 9th of August, 1842,
and was ratified by tlie Senate on the 20th of the same month.
In the next year the country was vexed with a domestic trouble.
For nearly two centuries the government of Rhode Island had been
administered under a charter granted by Charles II. By the terms
of that ancient instrument the right of suffrage was restricted to those
who held a certain amount of property. There were other clauses re-
pugnant to the spirit of republicanism; and a proposition was made
to change the constitution of the State. On that issue the people of
Rhode Island were nearly unanimous ; but in respect to the manner
•of abrogating the old charter there was a serious division. One fac-
ADMINISTRATIONS OF HARRISON AND TYLER.
443
tion, called the " law and order party/' proceeding in accordance with
the former constitution, chose Samuel W. King as governor. The
other faction, called the "suffrage party," acting in an irregular way,
elected Thomas W. Dorr. In May of 1842 both parties met and or-
ganized their rival governments.
The " law and order party " now undertook to suppress the faction
of Dorr. The latter resisted and made an attempt to capture the
State arsenal. But the militia, under the direction of King's officers,
drove the assailants away. A month later the adherents of Dorr again
appeared in arms, but were dispersed by the troops of the United
States. Dorr fled from Rhode Island; returned soon afterward, was
caught, tried for treason, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment for
life. He was then offered pardon on condition of taking an oath of
allegiance. This he stubbornly refused to do; and in June of 1845
obtained his liberty without conditions.
The year 1842 was noted for the completion of the Bunker
Hill Monument. No enterprise of a similar character had, in the
whole history of the country, called forth so much patriotic enthusiasm.
The foundation of the noble struc-
ture was laid on the 17th of June,
1825, the corner-stone being put into
its place by the venerable La Fay-
ette. Daniel Webster, then young
in years and fame, delivered the ora-
tion of the day, while two hundred
Revolutionary veterans — forty of
them survivors of the battle fought
-on that hill-crest just fifty years be-
fore— gathered with the throng to
hear him. But the work of erection
went on slowly. More than a hun-
dred and fifty thousand dollars were
expended, and seventeen years
elapsed before the grand shaft — com-
memorative of the heroes living and
■dead — was finished. At last the
work was done, and the mighty column of Quincy granite, thirty-one
feet square at the base and two hundred and twenty-one feet in height,
5tood out sublimely against the clouds and sky. It was deemed fit-
ting, however, to postpone the dedication until the next anniversary
of the battle; and preparations were made accordingly. On the 17th
BUNKER HILL MONUMENT.
444 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of June, 1843, an immense multitude of people — including most of
the Revolutionary soldiers who had not yet fallen — gathered from all
parts of the Republic to witness the imposing ceremony. Mr. Web-
ster, now full of years and honors, was chosen to deliver the address of
dedication — a duty which he performed in a manner so touching and
eloquent as to add new luster to his fame as an orator. The celebra-
tion was concluded with a public dinner given in Faneuil Hall, the
cradle of American liberty.
In the latter part of Tyler's administration the State of New
York was the scene of a serious social disturbance. Until the year
1840 the descendants of Van Rensselaer, one of the old Dutch pa-
troons of New Netherland, had held a claim on certain lands in the
counties of Rensselaer, Columbia and Delaware. In liquidation of
this claim they had continued to receive from the farmers certain
trifling rents. At last the farmers grew tired of the payment, and
rebelled. From 1840 until 1844 the question was frequently dis-
cussed in the New York legislature ; but no satisfactory settlement
was reached. In the latter year the anti-rent party became so bold
as to coat with tar and feathers those of their fellow-tenants who
made the payments. Officers were sent to ajiprehend the rioters ;
;ind them they killed. Time and again the authorities of the State
were invoked to quell the disturbers ; and the question in dispute has^
never been permanently settled.
Of a different sort was the difficulty with the Mormons, who now
began to play a part in the history of the country. Under the leader-
ship of their prophet, Joseph Smith, they made their first important set-
tlement in Jackson county, Missouri. Here their numbers increased to
fully fifteen hundred ; and they began to say that the great West was
to be their inheritance. Not liking their neighbors or their practices,^
the people of Missouri determined to be rid of them. As soon as op-
portunity offered, the militia was called out, and the Mormons were
obliged to leave the State. In" the spring of 1839 they crossed the
Mississippi into Illinois, and on a high bluff overlooking the river
laid out a city which they called Nauvoo, meaning the Beautiful.
Here they built a splendid temple. Other Mormons from different
parts of the Union and from Europe came to join the community,
until the number was swelled to ten thousand. Again popular sus-
picion was aroused against them. Under the administration of Smith,
laws were enacted contrary to the statute of Illinois. The people
charged the Mormons with the commission of certain thefts and mur-
ders ; and it was believed that the courts in the neighborhood of Nau-
voo would be powerless to convict the criminals.
ADMINISTRATIONS OF HARRISON AND TYLER. 445
In the midst of much excitement Smith and his brother were ar-
rested, taken to Carthage, and lodged in jail. On the 27th of June, 1844,
a mob gathered, broke open the jail doors and killed the prisoners. Dur-
ing the rest of the summer there were many scenes of violence. In 1845
the charter of Nauvoo was annulled bv the legislature of Illinois. Most
of the Mormons gave up in despair and resolved to exile themselves be-
yond the limits of civilization. In 1846 they began their march to the
far West. In September Nauvoo was cannonaded for three days, and the
remnant of inhabitants driven to join their companions at Council Bluffs.
Thence they dragged themselves wearily westward; crossed the Hocky
Mountains; rea'^hed the basin of the Great Salt Lake, and founded Utah
Territory.
Meanwhile, a great agitation had arisen in the country in regard to
the republic of Texas. From 1821 to 1836 this vast territory lying be-
tween Louisiana and Mexico, had been a province of the latter country.
For a long time it had been the policy of Spain and Mexico to keep
Texas uninhabited, in order that the vigorous race of Americans might
not encroach on the Mexican bcj ders. At last, however, a large land-
grant was made to Moses Austin of Connecticut, on condition that he
would settle three hundred American families within the limits of his do-
main. Afterward the grant was confirmed to his son Stephen, with the
privilege of establishing five hundred additional families of immigrants.
Thus the foundation of Texas was laid by people of the English race.
Owing to the oppressive policy adopted by Mexico, the Texans,
in the year 1835, raised the standard of rebellion. Many adventurers
and some heroes from the United States flocked to their aid. In the
first battle, fought at Gonzales, a thousand Mexicans were defeated by
a Texan force numbering five hundred. On the 6th of March, 1836,
a Texan fort, called the Alamo, was surrounded by a Mexican army
of eight thousand, commanded by President Santa Anna. The feeble
garrison was overpowered and massacred under circumstances of great
atrocity. The daring David Crocket, an ex-congressman of Tennessee,
and a famous hunter, was one of the victims of the butchery. In the
next month was fought the decisive battle of San Jacinto, which gave
to Texas her freedom. The independence of the new State was ac-
knowledged by the United States, Great Britain and France.
As soon as the people of Texas had thrown off the Mexican yoke
they asked to be admitted into the Union. At first the proposition
was declined by President Van Buren, who feared a war with Mex-
ico. In the last year of Tyler's administration the question of annex-
ation was again agitated. The population of Texas had increased to
more than two hundred thousand souls. The territory embraced an
44G
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
area of two hundred and thirty-seven thousand square miles — a do-
main more than five times as large as the State of Pennsylvania. It
was like annexing an empire. The proposition to admit Texas into
the Union was the great question on which the people divided in
the presidential elec-
tion of 1844. The
annexation was fa-
vored by the Demo-
crats and opposed by
the Whigs. The
parties were equally
matched in strength;
and the contest sur-
passed in excitement
anything which had
been known in Amer-
ican politics. James
K. Polk of Tennessee
was put forward as
the Democratic can-
didate, while the
Whigs chose their
favorite leader, Hen-
ry Clay. The former
was elected, and the
hope of the latter to reach the presidency was forever eclipsed. For
Vice-President, George M. Dallas of Pennsylvania was chosen.
The convention by Avhich Mr. Polk was nominated was held at
Baltimore. On the 29th of May, 1844, the news of the nomination was
sent to Washington by the Magnetic Telegraph. It was the first
despatch ever so transmitted ; and the event marks an era in the his-
tory of civilization. The inventor of the telegraph, which has proved
60 great a blessing to mankind, was Professor Samuel F. B. Morse
of Massachusetts. The magnetic principle on which the invention
depends had been known since 1774 ; but Professor Morse was the first
to apply that principle for the benefit of men. He began his experi-
ments in 1832: and five years afterward succeeded in obtaining a
patent on his invention. Then followed another long delay ; and it
was not until the last day of the session in 1843 that he procured
from Congress an appropriation of thirty thousand dollars. With
that appropriation was constructed between Baltimore and Wash-
PROFESSOR MORSE.
POLK'S ADMINISTBATION: 447
ington the first telegraphic line in the world. Perhaps no other
invention has exercised a more beneficent influence on the welfare
and happiness of the human race.
When Congress convened in December of 1844, the proposition
to admit Texas into the Union was formally brought forward. Dur-
ing the winter the question was frequently debated ; and on the 1st
of March — only three days before Tyler's retirement from the presi-
dency— the bill of annexation was adopted. The President imme-
diately gave his assent; and the Lone Star took its place in the
constellation of the States. On the day before the inauguration of
Mr. Polk bills for the admission of Florida and Iowa were also
signed ; but the latter State — the twenty-ninth member of the Amer*
lean Union — was not formally admitted until the following year.
CHAPTER LVII.
POLK'S ADMimSTRATION, AND THE MEXICAN WAR, 1845-1849.
PRESIDENT POLK was a native of North Carolina. In boyhood
he removed with his father to Tennessee ; entered the legislature
of the State ; and was then elected to Congress, where he served as
member or speaker for fourteen years. In 1839 he was chosen gov-
ernor of Tennessee, and from that position was called, at the early
age of forty-nine, to the presidential chair. At the head of the new
cabinet was placed James Buchanan of Pennsylvania. It was an of-
fice requiring high abilities; for the threatening question with Mexica
came at once to a crisis. As soon as the resolution to annex Texas
was adopted by Congress, Almonte, the Mexican minister at Washing-
ton, demanded his passports and left the country.
On the 4th of July, 1845, the Texan legislature ratified the act
of annexation ; and the union was completed. Knowing the warlike
determination of Mexico, the authorities of Texas sent an immediate
and urgent request to the President to despatch an army for their pro-
tection. Accordingly, General Zachary Taylor was ordered to march
from Camp Jessup, in Western Louisiana, and occupy Texas: The
real question at issue between that State and Mexico was concerning
boundaries. The foundation of the difficulty had been laid as early as-
448
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the Mexican revolution of 1821. By that event Mexico had achieved
her independence of Spain, and in rearranging her civil administra-
tion had united Coahuila and Texas — the two frontier States east of
the Rio Grande — under one provincial government. Such was the
condition of affairs at the time of the Texan rebellion of 1836. Texas,
being successful in her struggle with Mexico, naturally claimed that
her own independence carried with it the independence of Coahuila,
and that, therefore, the territory of the latter province became an in-
tegral part of the new Texan republic. This theory the joint legis-
lature of Texas and Coahuila made haste to put into statutory form
by a resolution of December 19th, 1836. Mexico, however, insisted
that Texas only, and not Coahuila, had revolted against her authority,
and that, therefore, the latter province, was still rightfully a part of
the Mexican dominions. Thus it came to pass that Texas — now a
State in the American Union — claimed the Rio Grande as her west-
ern limit, while Mexico was de-
termined to have the Nueces as
the separating line. The ter-
ritorv between the two rivers
Avas in dispute. The govern-
ment of the United States made
a proposal to settle the contro-
versy by negotiation, but the
authorities of Mexico scornfully
refused. This refusal was con-
strued by the Americans as a
virtual acknowledgment that
the Mexicans were in the
wronjr, and that the Rio Grande
might justly be claimed as the
boundary. Instructions were
accoi'dingly sent to General
Taylor to advance his army as
near to that river as circum-
stances would warrant. Under these orders he moved forward to Cor-
j)us Christi, at the mouth of the Nueces, established a camp, and by
the beginning of November, 1845, had concentrated a force of between
four and five thousand men.
In tlie following January General Taylor was ordered to advance
to the Rio Grande. It was known that the Mexican government had
resolved not to receive the American ambassador sent thither to ne-
TEXAS AND COAHUILA, 1845.
POLK'S ADMINISTRATION.
449
SCENE OF TAYLOR'S CAMPAIGN,
1846-47.
gotiate a settlement. It had also transpired that an army of Mexicans
was gathering in the northern part of the country for the invasion of
Texas, or, at any rate, for the occupation of the
disputed territory. On the 8th of March the
American army began the advance from Corpus
Christi to Point Isabel, on the gulf. At that
place General Taylor established a d§p6t of sup-
plies, and then pressed forward to the Rio
Grande. Arriving at the river a few miles
above the mouth, he took his station opposite
Matamoras and hastily erected a fortress, after-
ward named Fort Brown.
On the 26th of April, General Arista, who
had arrived at Matamoras on the previous day and assumed com-
mand of the Mexican forces on the frontier, notified General Tay-
lor that hostilities had begun. On the same day a company of Amer-
ican dragoons, commanded by Captain Thornton, was attacked by a
body of Mexicans, east of the Rio Grande, and after losing sixteen
men in killed and wounded, was obliged to surrender. This was the
first bloodshed of the war. At the same time large bodies of Mexi-
cans— marauders, infantry, and cavalry — crossed the Rio Grande be-
low Fort Brown and threatened the American lines of communication.
General Taylor, alarmed lest the Mexicans should make a circuit and
capture the stores at Point Isabel, hastened to that place and strength-
ened the defences. The fort opposite Matamoras was left under the
command of Major Brown with a garrison of three hundred men. The
withdrawal of the American general with the greater part of his forces
was witnessed by the Mexicans in Matamoras, who, mistaking the
movement for a retreat inspired by fear, were in great jubilation.
The Republican Monitor, a Mexican newspaper of Matamoras, pub-
lished on the following day a flaming editorial, declaring that the
cowardly invaders of Mexico had fled like a gang of poltroons to the
sea-coast and were using every exertion to get out of the country be-
fore the thunderbolt of Mexican vengeance should smite them. Ar-
ista himself was confident that the Americans, becoming alarmed at
their exposed position, had shrunk from the conflict and that it was only
necessary for him to bombard Fort Brown in order to end the war.
As soon as his supplies at Point Isabel were deemed secure.
General Taylor set out with a provision-train and an army of more
than two thousand men to return to Fort Brown. Meanwhile, the
Mexicans to the number of six thousand had crossed the Rio Grande
29
450 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and taken a strong position at Palo Alto, directly in Taylor's route. At:
noon on the 8th of May the Americans came in sight and immediately
joined battle. After a severe engagement of five hours' duration the
Mexicans were driven from the field, with the loss of a hundred men.
The American artillery was served with signal efiect ; while the fighting
of the enemy was clumsy and ineffectual. Only four Americans were
killed and forty wounded; but among the former was the gallant and
much-lamented Major Ringgold of the artillery.
On the following day General Taylor resumed his march in the
direction of Fort Brown. When within three miles of that place, he
again came upon the Mexicans, who had rallied in full force to dispute
his advance. They had selected for their second battle-field a place
called Resaca de la Palma. Here an old river-bed, dry and overgrown
with cactus, crossed the road leading to the fort. The enemy's artillery
was well posted and better served than on the previous day. The Ameri-
can lines were severely galled until the brave Captain May with his regi-
ment of dragoons charged through a storm of grape-shot, rode over the
Mexican batteries, sabred the gunners, and captured La Vega, the com-
manding general. The Mexicans, abandoning their guns and flinging
away their accoutrements, fled in a general rout. Before nightfall they
had put the Rio Grande between themselves and the invincible Americans.
On reaching Fort Brown, General Taylor found that during his absence
the place had been constantly bombarded by the guns of Matamoras.
But a brave defence had been made, which cost, with other losses and
suffering, the life of Major Brown, the commandant. Such was the be-
ginning of a war in which Mexico experienced a long list of humiliating
defeats.
When the news of the battles on the Rio Grande was borne through
the Union, the war spirit was everywhere aroused. Party dissensions
were hushed into silence. The President, in a message to Congress, noti-
fied that body that the lawless soldiery of Mexico had shed the blood of
American citizens on American soil. On the 11th of May, 1846, Con-
gress promptly responded with a declaration that war already existed by
the act of the Mexican government. The President was authorized to
accept the services of fifty thousand volunteers, and ten million dollars
were placed at his disposal. War meetings M^ere held in all parts of the
country, and within a few weeks nearly three hundred thousand men
rushed forward to enter the ranks. A grand invasion of Mexico was
planned by General Scott. The American forces were organized in three
divisions : the Arjiy of the West, under General Kearney, to cross
the Rocky Mountains and conquer the northern Mexican provinces r
r
POLK'S ADMINISTRATION. 451
THE Aemy of the Centre, Under General Scott as commander-in-
chief, to march from the gulf coast into the heart of the enemy's country ,
THE Army of Occupation, commanded by General Taylor, to subdues
and hold the districts on the Rio Grande.
The work of mustering the American troops was entrusted to Gen-
eral "Wool. By the middle of summer he succeeded in despatching t< .
General Taylor a force of nine thousand men. He then established his
camp at San Antonio, Texas, and from that point prepared the gathering
recruits for the field. Meanwhile, Taylor had resumed active operations
on the Rio Grande. Ten days after the battle of Resaca de la Palma he
crossed from Fort Brown and captured Matamoras. Soon afterward he
began his march up the right bank of the river and into the interior.
The Mexicans, grown wary of their antagonist, fell back and took post at
the fortified town of Monterey". To capture that place was the next object
of the campaign ; but the American army was feeble in numbers, and
General Taylor was obliged to tarry near the Rio Grande until the latter
part of August. By that time reinforcements had arrived, increasing his
numbers to six thousand six hundred. With this force the march against
Monterey was begun ; and on the 19th of September the town, defended
by fully ten thousand troops, under command of Ampudia, was reached
and invested.
The siege was pressed with great vigor. On the 21st of the month
several assaults were made, in which the Americans, led by General
Worth, carried the fortified heights in the rear of the town. In that part
of the defences only the bishop's palace — a strong building of stone — re-
mained ; and this was taken by storm on the following day. On the
morning of the 23d the city was successfully assaulted in front by Gen-
erals Quitman and Butler. In the face of a tremendous cannonade and
an incessant tempest of musket-balls discharged from the house-tops and
alleys, tlie American storm ing-parties charged resistlessly into the town»
They reached the Grand Plaza, or public square. They hoisted the vic-
torious flag of the Union. They turned upon the buildings where the
Mexicans were concealed ; broke open the doors ; charged up dark stair-
ways to the flat roofs of the houses ; and drove the terrified enemy to an
ignominious surrender. The honors of war were granted to Ampudia,
who evacuated the city and retired toward the capital. The storming of
Monterey was a signal victory, gained against great superiority of num-
bers and advantage of position.
After the capitulation General Taylor received notice that overtures
of peace were about to be made by the Mexican government. He there-
fore agreed to an armistice of eight weeks, during which time neither party
452 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
should renew hostilities. In reality the Mexicans had no thought of
peace. They employed the whole interval in warlike preparations. The
famous general Santa Anna was called home from his exile at Havana
to take the presidency of the country. In the course of the autumn a
Mexican army of twenty thousand men was raised and sent into the field.
In the mean time, the armistice had expired ; and General Taylor, acting
under orders of the War Department, again moved forward. On the 15th
of November, the town of Saltillo, seventy miles south-west from Mon-
terey, was captured by the American advance under General Worth. In
the following month, Victoria, a city in the province of Tamaulipas, was
taken by the command of General Patterson. To that place General
Butler advanced from Monterey on the march against Tampico, on the
river Panuco. At Victoria, however, he learned that Tampico had
already capitulated to Captain Conner, commander of an American
flotilla. Meanwhile, General Wool, advancing with strong reinforce-
ments from San Antonio, entered Mexico, and took a position within sup-
porting distance of Monterey. It was at this juncture that General Scott
arrived and assumed the command of the American forces.
The Army of the West had not been idle. In June of 1846
General Kearney set out from Fort Leavenworth, on the Missouri, for
the conquest of New Mexico and California. After a long and wearisome
march he reached Santa Fe, and on the 18th of August captured and gar-
risoned the city. The whole of New Mexico submitted without further
resistance. With a body of four hundred dragoons Kearney then con-
tinued his march toward the Pacific coast. At the distance of three hun-
dred miles from Santa Fe he was met by the famous Kit Carson, who
brought intelligence from the far West that California had already been
subdued. Kearney accordingly sent back three-fourths of his forces, and
with a party of only a hundred men made his way to the Pacific. On
that far-off coast stirring events had happened.
For four years Colonel John C. Fremont had been exploring the
•country west of the Rocky Mountains. He had hoisted the American
flag on the highest peak of the great range, and then directed his route by
Salt Lake to Oregon. Turning southward into California, he received
despatches informing him of the impending war with JNIexico. Deter-
mined to strike a blow for his country, he urged the people of California,
many of whom were Americans, to declare their independence. The
hardy frontiersmen of the Sacramento valley flocked to his standard ; and
a campaign was at once begun to overthrow the Mexican authority. In
several petty engagements the ximericans were victorious over greatly
*uiperior numbers. Meanwhile, Commodore Sloat, commanding an
POLK'S ADMINISTRATION. 453
American fleet, had captured the town of Monterey, on the coast, eighty
miles south of San Francisco. A few days afterward Commodore Stock-
ton took command of the Pacific squadron and made himself master of
San Diego. Hearing of these events, Fremont raised the flag of the
United States instead of the flag of California, and joined the naval com-
manders in a successful movement against Los Angelos, which was taken
without opposition. Before the end of summer the whole of the vast
province was subdued. In November General Kearney arrived with his
company and joined Fremont and Stockton. About a month later the
Mexicans rose in rebellion, but were defeated on the 8th of January,.
1847, in the decisive battle of San Gabriel, by which the authority of the
United States was completely established. A country large enough for
an empire had been conquered by a handful of resolute men.
In the mean time, Colonel Doniphan, who had been left by Kear-
ney in command of New Mexico, had made one of the most brilliant
movements of the war. With a body of seven hundred fearless men he
began a march through the enemy's country from Santa Fe to Saltillo, a
distance of more than eight hundred miles. Reaching the Rio Grande on
Christmas day, he fought and gained the battle of Bracito ; then, crossing
the river, captured El Paso, and in two months pressed his way to within
twenty miles of Chihuahua. On the banks of Sacramento Creek he met
the Mexicans in overwhelming numbers, and on the 28th of February
completely routed them. He then marched unopposed into Chihuahua —
a city of more than forty thousand inhabitants — and finally reached the
division of General Wool in safety.
As soon as General Scott arrived in Mexico he ordered a large part
of the Army of Occupation to join him on the gulf for the conquest of the
capital. By the withdrawal of these troops from the divisions of Taylor
and Wool these officers were left in a very exposed and critical condition ;
for Santa Anna was rapidly advancing against them with an army of
twenty thousand men. To resist this tremendous array General Taylor
was able to concentrate at Saltillo a force numbering not more than six
thousand ; and after putting sufficient garrisons in that town and Mon-
terey, his effective forces amounted to but four thousand eight hundred.
With this small but resolute army he marched boldly out to meet the
Mexican host. A favorable battle-ground was chosen at Buena Vista^
four miles south of Saltillo. Here Taylor posted his troops and awaited
the enemy.
On the 22d of February the Mexicans, twenty thousand strong,
came pouring through the gorges and over the hills from the direction of
San Luis Potosi. Santa Anna demanded a surrender, and was met with
454
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
defiance. On the morning of the 23d the battle began with an effort to out-
flank the American position on the right ; but the attempt was thwarted by
the troops of Illinois. A heavy column was then thrown against the centre,
only to be shattered and driven back by Captain Washington's artillery.
The Mexicans next fell in great force upon the American left flank, where
the second regiment of Indianians, acting under a mistaken order, gave
way, putting the army in great peril. But the troops of Mississippi and
Kentucky were rallied to the breach ; the men of Illinois and Indiana
came bravely to the support; and again the enemy was hurled back.
In the crisis of the battle the INIexicans made a furious and final charge
upon Captain Bragg's battery ; but the gunners stood at their posts un-
daunted, and the columns of lancers were scattered with terrible volleys
of grape-shot. A charge of American cavalry, though made at the sacri-
fice of many lives, added to the discomfiture of the foe. Against tremen-
dous odds the field was fairly won. On the night after the battle the
Mexicans, having lost nearly two thousand men, made a jirecipitate re-
treat. The American loss was also severe, amounting, in killed, wounded
and missing, to seven hundred and forty-six. This was the last of General
Taylor's battles. He soon afterward returned to the United States, where
he was received with great enthusiasm.
On the 9th of March, 1847, General Scott began the last campaign
of the war. With a force of twelve thousand men he landed to the south
of Vera Cruz, and in three days the
investment of the city was completed.
Trenches were opened at the distance
of eight hundred yards ; and on the
morning of the 22d the cannonade
was begun. On the water side Vera
Cruz M'as defended by the celebrated
castle of San Juan d'Ulloa, erected
by Spain in the early part of the sev-
enteenth century, at the cost of four
million dollars. For four days an
incessant storm of shot and shell from the fleet of Commodore Conner and
tlie land-batteries of Scott was poured upon the doomed castle and town.
Life and property were swept into a common ruin. An assault was
already planned, when the humbled authorities of the city proposed ca-
pitulation. On the night of the 27th terms of surrender were signed, and
two days afterward the American flag floated over Vera Cruz.
The route from the gulf to the capital was now open. On the 8th
of April General Twiggs, in command of the American advance, set out
SCENE OF SCOTT'S CAMPAIGN, 1S47.
POLK'S ADMINISTRATION. 455
on the road to Jalapa. The main division, led by General Scott in per-
son, followed immediately. For several days there was no serious oppo-
sition; but on the 12th of the month Twiggs came upon Santa Anna,
who, with an army of fifteen thousand men, had taken possession of the
heights and rocky pass of Cerro Gordo. The position, though seemingly
impregnable, must be carried, or further advance was impossible. On the
morning of the 18th the American army was arranged for an assault which,
according to all the rules of war, promised only disaster and ruin. But to
the troops of the United States nothing now seemed too arduous, no deed too
full of peril. Before noonday every position of the Mexicans had been suc-
cessfully stormed and themselves driven into a precipitate rout. Nearly
three thousand prisoners were taken, together with forty-three pieces of
bronze artillery, five thousand muskets and accoutrements enough to
supply an army. The American loss amounted to four hundred and
thirty-one, that of the enemy to fully a thousand. Santa Anna escaped
with his life, but left behind his private papers and wooden leg.
On the next day the victorious army entered Jalapa. On the 22d
the strong castle of Perote, crowning a peak of the Cordilleras, was taken
without resistance. Here another park of artillery and a vast amount of
warlike stores fell into the hands of the Americans. Turning southward,
'General Scott next led his army against the ancient and sacred city of
Puebla. Though inhabited by eighty thousand people, no defence was
made or attempted. The handful of invaders marched unopposed through
the gates, and on the 15th of May took up their quarters in the city.
The American army was now reduced to five thousand men, and General
Scott was obliged to pause until reinforcements could be brought forward
from Yera Cruz. Negotiations were again opened in the hope of peace ;
but the Mexican authorities, stubborn and foolhardy as at the beginning,
preferred to fight it out.
By the 7th of August General Scott had received reinforcements,
rswelling his numbers to nearly eleven thousand. Leaving a small garri-
cson in Puebla, he again began his march upon the capital. The route
now lay over the summit of the Cordilleras. At the passes of the moun-
tains resistance had been expected ; but the advance was unopposed, and
the army swept through to look down on the Valley of Mexico.
Never before had the American soldiery beheld such a scene. Clear to
the horizon stretched a most living landscape of green fields, villages and
lakes — a picture too beautiful to be torn with the dread enginery of war.
The army pressed on to Ayotla, only fifteen miles from the capital.
Thus far General Scott had followed the great national road from Vera
Cruz to Mexico ; but now, owing to the many fortifications and danger-
456 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ous passes in front, it was deemed advisable to change the route. From
Ayotla, therefore, the army wheeled to the south, around Lake Chalco,
and thence westward to San Augustine. From this place it was but ten
miles to the capital. The city could be approached only by causeways
leading across marshes and the beds of bygone lakes. At the ends of*'
these causeways were massive gates strongly defended. To the left of
the line of march were the almost inaccessible positions of Contreras, San
Antonio and Molino del Rey. Directly in front, beyond the marshes and
closer to the city, were the powerful defences of Churubusco and Chapul-
tepec^ the latter a castle of great strength. These various positions were
held by Santa Anna with a force of more than thirty thousand Mexicans.
That General Scott, with an army not one-third as great in numbers,
could take the city seemed an impossibility. But he was resolved to
do it.
On the 19th of August the divisions of Generals Pillow and Twiggs
were ordered to storm the Mexican position at Contreras. About night-
fall the line of communications between that place and Santa Anna's re-
serves was cut, and in the darkness of the following midnight an assault-
ing column, led by General Persifer F. Smith, moved against the enemy's
camp. The attack was made at sunrise, and in seventeen minutes six
thousand Mexicans, commanded by General Valencia, were driven in
utter rout from their fortifications. The American storm ing-party num-
bered less than four thousand. This was the Jirst victory of that mem-
orable 20th of August. A few hours afterward General Worth advanced
against San Antonio, compelled an evacuation and routed the flying gar-
rison. This was the second victory. Almost at the same time General
Pillow led a column against one of the heights of Oliurubusco where the
enemy had concentrated in great force. After a terrible assault the posi-
tion was carried and the Mexicans scattered like chaff. This was the
third triumj)h. The division of General Twiggs added a fourth victory
by storming and holding another height of Churubusco, while the ffth
and last was achieved by Generals Shields and Pierce, who defeated
Santa Anna, coming to reinforce his garrisons. The whole Mexican army
was hurled back upon the remaining fortification of Chapultepec.
On the mornino: after the battles the IMexican authorities sent out
a proposition to negotiate. It was only a ruse to gain time, for the terms
proposed by them were such as conquerors would have dictated to the
vanquished. General Scott, who did not consider his army vanquished,
rejected the proposals with scorn, rested his men until the 7th of Septem-
ber, and then renewed hostilities. On the next morning General Worth
was ordered to take ^Molino del Rey and Casa de JSIata, the western de-
POLK 'S ADMINISTRA TION.
45r
l.ences of Chapultepec. These positions were held by fourteen thousand
Mexicans; but the Americans, after losing a fourth of their number in the
desperate onset, were again victorious. The guns were next brought to
bear on Chapultepec itself, and on the 13th of the month that frowning
citadel was carried by storm. Through the San Cosme and Belen gates
the conquering army swept resistlessly, and at nightfall the soldiers of the
Union were in the suburbs of Mexico.
In the darkness of that night Santa Anna and the officers of th&
government fled from
the city; but not un-
til they had turned
loose two thousand
convicts to fire upon
the American army.
On the following
morning, before day-
dawn, forth came a
deputation from the
city to beg for mercy.
This time the messen-
gers ivere in earnest;
but General Scott,
weary of trifling,
turned them away ^
with contempt. " For-
ward!" was the order
that rang along the
American lines at sun-
rise. The war-worn
regiments swept into
the beautiful streets of
the famous city, and
at seven o'clock the flag of the United States floated over the halls of the
Montezumas. So ended one of the most brilliant campaigns known in
modern history.
On leaving his conquered capital Santa Anna, with his usual
treachery, turned about to attack the American hospitals at Puebla.
Here about eighteen hundred sick men had been left in charge of Colonel
Childs. For several days a gallant resistance was made by the feeble
garrison, until General Lane, on his march to the capital, fell upon the
besiegers and scattered them. It was the closing stroke of the war — a
GENERAL WINFIELD SCOTT.
458 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
contest in which the Americans, few in number and in a far-distantj,
densely-peopled country, had gained every victory.
The military power of Mexico was now completely broken. Santa
Anna was a fugitive. It only remained to determine the conditions of
peace. In the winter of 1847-48 American ambassadors met the Mexican
Congress, in session at Guadalupe Hidalgo, and on the 2d of February a
treaty was concluded between the two nations. The compact was ratified
by both governments, and on the 4th of the following July President Polk
made a proclamation of peace. By the terms of settlement the boundary-
line between Mexico and the United States was fixed as follows: The
Rio Grande from its mouth to the southern limit of New Mexico ; thence
westward along the southern and northward along the western boundary
of that territory to the river Gila ; thence down that river to the Colo-
rado ; thence westward to the Pacific. The whole of New Mexico and
Upper California was relinquished to the United States. ISIexico guar-
anteed the free navigation of the Gulf of California, and the river Colo-
rado from its mouth to the confluence of the Gila. In consideration of
these territorial acquisitions and privileges the United States agreed to
surrender all places held by military occupation in Mexico, to pay into
the treasury of that country fifteen million dollars, and to assume all debts
due from the Mexican government to American citizens, said debts not to
exceed three million five hundred thousand dollars. Thus at last was the
territory of the United States spread out in one broad belt from ocean to
ocean.
In the mean time the troublesome and alarming question of ihb
Oregon Boundary was finally disposed of. For more than a quarter
•of a century the territorial limit of the United States on the northwest
had been a matter of controversy between the Federal government
and Great Britain. By the terms of the convention of 1818 the in-
ternational line had been carried westward from the northwestern ex-
tremity of the Lake of the Woods along the forty-ninth parallel to
the crest of the Rocky Mountains; but from that point to the Pacific
no agreement could be reached. As early as 1807, and again in 1818
and 1826, the United States had formally claimed the parallel of fifty-
four degrees and forty minutes; but this boundary Great Britain refused
to accept. By a convention, held in August of 1827, it was agreed by
the representatives of the two powers that the territory lying between
the forty-ninth parallel — which, according to the English theory, was
the true international line — and the parallel of fifty-four degrees and
forty minutes should remain open indefinitely and impartially for the
joint occupancy of British and American citizens. By this action the
POLK'S ADMINISTRATION. 459
-difficulty was postponed for sixteen years; but thouglitful statesmen
of both nations became alarmed that a question of such magnitude
should remain unsettled, and negotiations were renewed. In 1843
the minister resident of the United States in London again proposed
the parallel of fifty-four degrees and forty minutes, but the proposition
was rejected. In the next year the British ambassador at Washington
again suggested the forty-ninth degree of latitude as the true bound-
ary; but to this the government of the United States refused to ac-
cede. Then came the war with Mexico and with it the prospective
extension of territory on the southwest. The views of the adminis-
tration in regard to the northwestern boundary became less stringent;
and finally, in a convention of the two powers held on the 15th of
June, 1846, the question was definitely settled by a treaty. Every
point of the long-standing controversy was decided in favor of Great
Britain. The forty-ninth parallel was established as the international
boundary from the summit of the Rocky Mountains to the middle of
the channel which separates the continent from Vancouver's Island;
thence southerly through tlie middle of said channel and of Fuca's
Straits to the Pacific. Vancouver's Island itself was awarded to Great
Britain; and the free navigation of the Columbia River was guaran-
teed to the Hudson Bay Company and other British subjects on the
.same conditions as those imposed on citizens of the United States.
The treaty was by no means so favorable as might have been expected,
and by many it was denounced as actually dishonorable to the Fed-
eral government. It is certain that better terms might have been de-
manded and obtained.*
A few days after the signing of the treaty of peace with Mexico
an event occurred in California which spread excitement through the
civilized world. A laborer, employed by Captain Sutter to cut a mill-
race on the American fork of the Sacramento River, discovered some
pieces of gold in the sand where he was digging. With further search
other particles were found. The news spread as if borne on the wind.
From all quarters adventurers came flocking. Other explorations led
to further revelations of the precious metal. For a while there seemed
no end to the discoveries. Straggling gold-hunters sometimes picked
up in a few hours the value of five hundred dollars. The intelligence
went flying through the States to the Atlantic, and then to the ends
*Such was the indignation of the opponents of this treaty — especially of the leaders
of the Whig party — tliat the political battle-cry of ^'Fifty-four Forty or Fight/" became
almost as popular a motto as "Free Trade and Sailors' Rights" had been in the War
•of 1812.
460
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the world. Men thousands of miles away were crazed with excite-
ment. Workshops were shut up, business houses abandoned, fertile
farms left tenantless, offices deserted. Though the overland routes to
California were scarcely yet discovered, thousands of our eager adven-
turers started on the long, long journey. Before the end of 1850 San
Francisco had grown from a miserable village of huts to a city of
fifteen thousand inhabitants. By the close of 1852 the territory had
a population of more than a quarter of a million. The importance
of the gold mines of California, whose richness is not yet exhausted,
can hardly be overestimated.
THE SMITUbONIAN INSTITUTION.
In April of 1846, Congress passed an act organizing the Smith-
sonian Institution at Washington City. Twenty-two years previ-
ously an eminent English chemist and philanthropist named James
Smithson* had died at Genoa, bequeathing on certain conditions a
large sum of money to the United States. In the fall of 1838, by
the death of Smithson's nephew, the proceeds of the estate, amount-
ing to five hundred and fifteen thousand dollars, were secured by the
* Until after his graduation at Oxford in 1786, this remarkable man was known hy
the name of James Lewis Made. Afterward, of his own accord, he chose the name of.
his reputed futlier, Hugh Smithson, duke of Northumberland,
POLK'S ADMINISTRATION. 461
agent of the national government and deposited in the mint. It had
been provided in the will that the bequest should be used for the
establishment at Washington of an institution Jor the increase and dif-
fusion of knowledge among men. To carry out the great design of the
testator a plan of organization, prepared by John Quincy AdamS; was
laid before Congress and after some modifications adopted.
In the act of establishment it was provided that the institution
contemplated by Mr. Smithson should be named in his honor " The
Smithsonian Institution " ; that the same should be under the imme-
diate control of a Board of Regents composed of the President, Vice-
President, judges of the Supreme Court, and other principal officers
of the government; that the entire Smithsonian fund, amounting with
accrued interest to six hundred and fifty-five thousand dollars, should
be loaned forever to the United States at six per cent. ; that out of the
proceeds, together with congressional appropriations and private gifts,
buildings should be provided suitable to contain a museum of nat-
ural history, a cabinet of minerals, a chemical laboratory, a gallery
of art, and a library. Professor Joseph Henry of Princeton College
was chosen secretary of the institution, and the plan of organization
was speedily and successfully carried out. The result has been the
establishment in the United States of one of the most beneficent in-
stitutions known in the history of mankind. The Smithsonian Con-
tributions to Knoioledge already amount to eighteen volumes quarto;
and the future is destined to yield still richer results in widening the
boundaries of human thought and increasing the happiness of men.
In the first summer of President Polk's administration the coun-
try was called to mourn the death of General Jackson. The veteran
warrior and statesman lived to the age of seventy-eight, and died at
his home, called the Hermitage, in Tennessee. On the 23d of Feb-
ruary, 1848, ex-President John Quincy Adams died at the city of
Washington. At the time of his decease he was a member of the
House of Representatives. He was struck with paralysis in the very
seat from which he had so many times electrified the nation with his
eloquence.
In 1848 Wisconsin, the last of the five great States formed from
the North-western Territory, was admitted into the Union. The new
commonwealth came with a population of two hundred and fifty thou-
sand and an area of nearly fifty-four thousand square miles. By estab-
lishing the St. Croix instead of the Mississippi as the western boundary
of the State, Wisconsin lost a considerable district rightfully belonging
to her territory.
462 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Near the close of Polk's administration an important addition
was made to the President's cabinet by the establishment of the De-
partment OP THE Interioe. To the three original departments of
the government, as organized during the administration of Washing-
ton, had already been added the offices of Postmaster-General and
Secretary of the Navy. The Attorney-General had also come to be
recognized as a regular member of the cabinet. With the growth
and development of the nation it was found that the duties belong-
ing to the departments of state and the treasury had become so man-
ifold as to require the establishment of a separate office. A certain
part of these duties were accordingly detached, and the new " Home
Department" — afterwards called Department of the Interior — was
constituted by act of Congress. In the beginning of the next admin-
istration the new secretaryship was assigned to General Thomas Ewing
of Ohio.
Another presidential election was at hand. Three well-known
candidates were presented for the suffrages of the people. General
Lewis Cass of Michigan was nominated by the Democrats, and Gen-
eral Zachary Taylor by the Whigs. As the candidate of the new
Free-Soil party, ex-President Martin Van Buren was put forward.
The rise of this new party was traceable to a question concerning the
territory acquired by the Mexican War. In 1846 David Wilraot of
Pennsylvania brought before Congress a bill to 'prohibit slavery in all
the territory which might be secured by treaty with Mexico. The
bill was defeated; but the advocates of the measure, which was called
the WiLMOT Proviso, formed themselves into a party, and in June
of 1848 nominated Mr. Van Buren for the presidency. The real
contest, however, lay between Generals Cass and Taylor. The posi-
tion of the two leading parties on the question of slavery in the new
territories was as yet not clearly defined, and the election was left to
turn on the personal popularity of the candidates. The memory of
his recent victories in Mexico made General Taylor the favorite with
the people, and he was elected by a large majority. As Vice-Presi-
dent, Millard Fillmore of New York was chosen. So closed the agi-
tated but not inglorious administration of President Polk.
ADMINISTRATIONS OF TAYLOR AND FILLMORE.
465^
CHAPTER LVIII
ADMINISTRATIONS OF TAYLOR AND FILLMORE, 1849-185S.
THE new President was a Virginian by birth, a Kentuckian by breed-
ing, a soldier by profession. In 1808 he left the farm to accept a
commission in the army. During the war of 1812 he distinguished him-
self in the North-west, especially in defending Fort Harrison against the.
Red men. In the
Seminole War he bore
a conspicuous part, but
earned his greatest re-
nown in Mexico. His
reputation, though
strictly military, was
enviable, and his cha-
racter above reproach.
His administration be-
gan with a violent agi-
tation on the question
of slavery in the terri-
tories; California, the
El Dorado of the West,
was the origin of the
dispute.
In his first mes-
sage President Taylor
expressed his sympa-
thy with the Califor-
nians, and advised
them to form a State
government prepara-
tory to admission into the Union. The advice was promptly accepted,.
A convention of delegates was held at Monterey in September of 1849.
A constitution 'prohibiting slavery was framed, submitted to the people,
and adopted with but little opposition. Peter H. Burnet was elected
governor of the Territory ; members, of a general assembly Avere chosen ;
and on the 20th of December, 1849, the new government was organized
PRESIDENT TAYLOR.
464 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
at San Jose. At the same time a petition in the usual form was for-
warded to Congress asking for the admission of California as a State.
The presentation of the petition was the signal for a bitter contro-
versy. As in the ease of the admission of Missouri, the members of Con-
gress, and to a great extent the people, were sectionally divided. But
now the position of the parties was reversed ; the proposition to admit the
new State was favored by the representatives of the North and opposed
by those of the South. The ground of the opposition was that with the
extension of the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific the right to in-
troduce slavery into California was guaranteed by the general government,
and that therefore the proposed constitution of the State ought to be re-
jected. The reply of the North Avas that the argument could apply only
to a 'part of the new State, that the Missouri Compromise had respect only
to the Louisiana purchase, and that the people of California had framed
their constitution in their own way. Such was the issue; and the debates
grew more and more violent, until the stability of the Union was seriously
endangered.
Other exciting questions added fuel to the controversy. Texas
claimed New Mexico as a part of her territory, and the claim was resisted
by the people of Santa Fe, who desired a separate government. The peo-
ple of the South complained bitterly that fugitive slaves, escaping from
their masters, were aided and encouraged in the North. The opponents
of slavery demanded the abolition of the slave-trade in the District of
Columbia. Along the whole line of controversy there was a spirit of
suspicion, recrimination and anger.
The illustrious Henry Clay appeared as a peacemaker. In the
spring of 1850 he was appointed chairman of a committee of thirteen, to
whom all the questions under discussion were referred. On the 9th of
May he brought forward, as a compi-omise covering all the points in dis-
pute, THE Omnibus Bill, of which the provisions were as follows: First,
the admission of California as a free State ; second, the formation of new
States, not exceeding four in number, out of the territory of Texas, said
States to permit or exclude slavery as the people should determine; third,
the organization of territorial governments for New Mexico and Utah,
without conditions on the question of slavery ; fourth, the establishment
of the present bonndar}'- between Texas and New Mexico, and the pay-
ment to the former for surrendering the latter the sum of ten million dol-
lars from the national treasury ; ffth, the enactment of a more rigorous
law for the recovery of fugitive slaves ; si^th, the abolition of the slave-
trade in the District of Columbia.
When the Omnibus Bill was laid before Congress, the debates began
ADMINISTRATIONS OF TAYLOR AND FILLMORE.
465
anew, and seemed likely to be interminable. While the discussion was at
its height and the issue still undecided, President Taylor fell sick, and
died on the 9th of July, 1850. In accordance with the provisions of the
constitution, Mr. Fillmore at once took the oath of office and entered upon
the duties of the presidency. A new cabinet was formed, with Daniel
Webster at the head as secretary of state. Notwithstanding the death of
the chief magistrate, the government moved on without disturbance.
The compromise proposed by Mr. Clay and sustained by his elo-
quence was at length
approved by Congress.
On the 18th of Sep-
tember the last clause
was adopted, and the
whole received the im-
mediate sanction of the
President. The ex-
citement in the coun-
tiy rapidly abated, and
the distracting contro-
versy seemed at an end.
Such was the last, and
perhaps the greatest,
of those pacific mea-
sures originated and
carried through Con-
gress by the genius
of Henry Clay. He
shortly afterward bade
adieu to the Senate,
and sought at his be-
loved Ashland a brief
rest from the arduous
<^res of i)ul)lic life.
The passage of the Omnibus Bill brought a political quiet ; but
the moral convictions of very few men were altered by its provisions.
Public opinion remained as before : in the North, a general, indefinite,
but growing hostility to slavery; in the South, a fixed and resolute
purpose to defend and extend that institution. To the President,
whose party was in the ascendency in most of the Free States, the
measure was fatal ; for although his cabinet had advised him to sign
the bill, the Whigs were at heart opposed to the fugitive slave law,
90
HENKY CLAY.
466 HISTORY OF TEE UNITED STATES.
and when he gave his assent they turned coldly from him. In the
"Whig National convention, two years afterwards, although the policy
of the President was approved and the compromise measures ratified
by a vote of two hundred and twenty-seven against sixty, not twenty
Northern votes could be obtained for his renomination. Thus do
political parties punish their leaders for hesitating to espouse a prin-
ciple which the parties themselves are afraid to avow.
The year 1850 was marked by a lawless attempt on the part of
some American adventurers to gain possession of Cuba. It was-
thought that the people of that island were anxious to throw off the
Spanish yoke and to annex themselves to the United States. In order
to encourage such a movement. General Lopez organized an expedi-
tion in the South, and on the 19th of May, 1850, effected a landing
at Cardenas, a port of Cuba. But there was no uprising in his favor ;
neither Cubans nor Spanish soldiers joined his standard, and he was
obliged to seek safety by returning to Florida. Renewing the attempt
in the following year, he and his band of four hundred and eighty
men were attacked, defeated and captured by an overwhelming force
of Spaniards. Lopez and the ringleaders were taken to Havana^
tried, condemned and executed.
The first annual message of the President was a document of
great ability. Among the many important measures pressed upon the
attention of Congress were the following : a system of cheap and uni-
form postage ; the establishment, in connection with the Department
of the Interior, of a Bureau of Agriculture; liberal appropriations for
the improvement of rivers and harbors; the building of a national
asylum for disabled and destitute seamen ; a permanent tariff with
specific duties on imports and discrimination in favor of American
manufactures ; the opening of communication between the Mississij^pi
and the Pacific coast; a settlement of the land difficulties in Califor-
nia ; an act for the retirement of supernumerary officers of the army
and navy; and a board of commissioners to adjust the claims of pri-
vate citizens against the government of the United States. Only two
of these important recommendations — the asylum for sailors and the
settlement of the land claims in California — were carried into effect.
For the President's party were in a minority in Congress ; and the
majority refused or neglected to approve his measures.
In 1852 a serious trouble arose with England. By the terms
of former treaties the coast-fisheries of Newfoundland belonged ex-
clusively to Great Britain. But outside of a line drawn three miles
from the shore American fisherman enjoyed equal rights and privi-
ADMINISTRATIONS OF TAYLOR AND FILLMORE. 467
leges. Now the dispute arose as to whether the line shoukl be drawn
from one headland to another so as to give all the bays and inlets to
England, or whether it should be made to conform to the irregulari-
ties of the coast. Under the latter construction American fishing^-
vessels would have equal claims in the bays and harbors; but this
privilege was denied by Great Britain, and the quarrel rose to such a
height that both nations sent men-of-war to the contested waters. But
reason triumphed over passion, and in 1854 the difficulty was happily
settled by negotiation ; the right to take fish in any of the bays of
the British possessions was conceded to American fishermen.
During the summer of 1852 the celebrated Hungarian patriot
Louis Kossuth made the tour of the United States. Austria and
Kussia had united against his native land and overthrown her liber-
ties. He came to plead the cause of Hungary before the American
people, and to obtain such aid as might be privately furnished to his
oppressed countrymen. Every-where he was received with expres-
sions of sympathy and good-will. His mission was successful, though
the long-established policy of the United States forbade the govern-
ment to interfere on behalf of the Hungarian patriots.
About this time the attention of the American people was di-
rected in a special manner to explorations in the Arctic Ocean. In
1845 Sir John Franklin, one of the bravest of English seamen, went
on a voyage of discovery to the extreme North. He believed in the
possibility of passing through an open polar sea into the Pacific.
Years went by, and no tidings came from the daring sailor. It was
only known that he had passed the country of Esquimaux, Other
expeditions were despatched in search, but returned without success.
Henry Grinnell, a wealthy merchant of New York, fitted out several
vessels at his own expense, put them under command of Lieutenant
De Haven, and sent them to the North ; but in vain. The govern-
ment came to Mr. Grinnell's aid. In 1853 a new Arctic squadron
was equipped ; the command of which was given to Dr. Elisha Kent
Kane; but the expedition, though rich in scientific results, returned
without the discovery of Franklin.
During the administrations of Taylor and Fillmore the country
was called to mourn the loss of many distinguished men. On the 31st
of March, 1850, Senator John C. Calhoun of South Carolina passed
away. His death was much lamented, especially in his own State, to
whose interests he had devoted the energies of his life. His earnest-
ness and zeal and powers of debate have placed him in the front rank
of American orators. At the age of sixty-eight he fell from his place
468
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
like a scarred oak of the forest never to rise again. Then followed
the death of the President; and then, on the 28th of June, 1852,
Henry Clar, having fought his last battle, sank to rest. On the 24th
of the following October the illustrious Daniel AVebster died at his
home at Marshfield,
Massachusetts. The
place of secretary of
State, made vacant
by his death, was
conferred on Edward
Everett.
In Europe the
news of Lopez's ri-
diculous invasion of
Cuba created great
excitement. Not-
Avithstanding a dis-
tinct disavowal of
the whole proceeding
on the part of the
Federal government,
notwithstanding the
immediate dismissal
of the officer at New
Orleans who had al-
lowed the expedition
of Lopez to escape
from that port, — the governments of Great Britain and France affec-
ted to believe that the covert aim and purpose of the United States
was to acquire Cuba by conquest. Acting upon this presumption the
British and French ministers proposed to the American government
to enter into a Tripartite Treaty — so called — in which each of the con-
tracting nations was to disclaim then and forever all intention of pos-
sessing Cuba. To this proposal Mr. Everett replied in one of the
most masterly State papers on record. Great Britain and France were
informed that the annexation of Cuba was regarded by the United
States as a measure hazardous and impolitic ; that entire good faith
would be kept with Spain and with all nations; but that the Federal
government did not recognize in any European power the right to
meddle with affairs purely American, and that, in accordance with
the doctrine set forth by President Monroe, any such interference
JOHN C. CALHOUN.
PIERCE'S ADMINISTRATION. 469
would be resented as an affront to the sovereignty of the United
States.
As Filhiiore's administration drew to a close the political parties
again marshaled their forces. Franklin Pierce of New Hampshire
appeared as the candidate of the Democratic party, and General Win-
field Scott as the choice of the Whigs. The question at issue before
the country was the Compromise Act of 1850. But the parties, in-
stead of being divided, were for once agreed as to the wisdom of that
measure. Both the Whig and Democratic platforms stoutly reaffirmed
the justice of the Omnibus Bill, by which the dissensions of the coun-
try had been quieted. A third party arose, however, whose members,
both Whigs and Democrats, doubted the wisdom of the compromise
of 1850, and declared that all the Territories of the United States
ought to be free. John P. Hale of New Hampshire was put forward
as the candidate of this Free Soil party. Mr. Pierce was elected by a
large majority, and William R. King of Alabama was chosen Vice-
President.
CHAPTER LIX.
PIERCE'S ADMINISTRATION, 1853-1857.
rpHE new chief magistrate was a native of New Hampshire, a graduate
-L of Bowdoin College, a lawyer, a politician, a general in the Mexican
War, a statesman of considerable abilities. Mr. King, the Vice-Presi-
dent, had for a long time represented Alabama in the Senate of the United
States. On account of failing health he was sojourning in the island of
Cuba at the time of the inauguration, and there he received the oath of
office. Growing still more feeble, he returned to his own State, Avhere
he died on the 18th of April, 1853. As secretary of state under the new
administration William L. Marcy of New York Avas chosen.
In the summer of 1853 the first corps of engineers was sent out by
the government to explore the route for a Pacific Railroad. The
enterprise was at first regarded as visionary, then believed in as possible,
and finally undertaken and ^iccomplished. In the same year that marked
the beginning of the project the disputed boimdary between New Mexico
and Chihuahua was satisfactorily settled. The maps on which the former
treaties with Mexico had been based were found to be erroneous. Santa
470 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Anna, who had again become president of the Mexican republic, at-
tempted to take advantage of the error, and sent an army to occupy
the territory between the true and the false boundary. This action
was resisted by the authorities of New Mexico and the United States,
and a second Mexican war seemed imminent. The difficulty was ad-
justed, however, by the purchase of the doubtful claim of Mexico.
This transaction, known as the Gadsden Purchase, led to the erec-
tion of the new Territory of Arizona.
The first year of Pierce's administration was signalized by the
opening of intercourse between the United States and the great em-
pire of Japan. Hitherto the Japanese ports had been closed against
the vessels of Christian nations. In order to remove this foolish and
injurious restriction Commodore Perry, a son of Oliver H. Perry of
the war of 1812, sailed with his squadron into the Bay of Yeddo.
When warned to depart, he explained to the Japanese officers the sin-
cere desire of the United States to enter into a commercial treaty with
the emperor. After much delay and hesitancy consent was obtained to
hold an interview with that august personage. Accordingly, on the
14th of July, the commodore with his officers obtained an audience
with the dusky monarch of the East, and presented a letter from the
President of the United States. Still the government of Japan was
wary of accepting the proposition, and it was not until the spring of
1854 that a treaty could be concluded. The privileges of commerce
were thus conceded to American merchant vessels, and two ports of
entry were designated for their use.
On the very day of Commodore Perry's introduction to the em-
peror of Japan the Crystal Palace was opened in the city of New York
for the second World's .Fair. The palace itself was a marvel in ar-
chitecture, being built exclusively of iron and glass. Thousands of
specimens of the arts and manufactures of all civilized nations were
put on exhibition within the spacious building. The enterprise and
inventive genius of the whole country were quickened into a new
life by the beautiful and instructive display. International exhibitions
are among the happiest fruits of an enlightened age.
During the administration of Pierce the country was frequently
disturbed by the filibustering expeditions of General William Walker
into Central America. This audacious and unscrupulous adventurer
began his operations in 1853 by escaping with a band of followers
from the port of San Francisco and making a descent on La Paz in
LoAver California. In the spring of 1854 he marched overland with a
hundred men and raised the standard of revolt in the state of Sonora;
PIERCE'S ADMINISTRATION. 471
l)ut the company was dispersed and himself made prisoner. In May
of the same year he was tried by the authorities of San Francisco and
acquitted. But not satisfied with his previous experience, he again
raised a band of sixty-two followers and proceeded to Central America.
Being joined by a regiment of natives he fought and gained a battle
at Rivas, on the 29th of June, 1855. In a second battle at Virgin
Bay he was also successful. Fighting continued until the following
summer when his influence had become so powerful that he was
elected president of Nicaraugua. Then came a change in his fortunes.
A great insurrection ensued ; and the other Central American states,
assisted by the Vanderbilt steam-ship company, whose rights he had
violated, combined against him and on the 1st of May, 1857, he was
again made prisoner. But in a short time he was foot-loose at New
Orleans, where he organized a third company of adventurers — men
who had everything to gain and nothing to lose — and on the 25th of
November succeeded in reaching Punta Arenas, Nicaraugua.
Within less than a month, however, he was again obliged to sur-
render to Commodore Paulding of the United States navy. For a
"while the great filibuster was a prisoner at New York ; but getting his
liberty, he continued his scheming, and in June of 1860 a third time
reached Central America at the head of a considerable force. This
time the descent was made at Truxillo, Honduras. But the president
of that state, assisted by a British man-of-war, soon overpowered and
captured the whole band. On the 3d of September Walker was tried
by a court-martial at Truxillo, condemned, and shot. The courage
with which he met his fate has half redeemed his forfeited fame and
left after times in doubt whether he shall be called fanatic or hero. ^
To this period also belongs the history of what is known in
American diplomacy as the Martin Koszta Affair. Martin Koszta
was a leader in the Hungarian revolt against Austria, in 1849. After
the rebellion was suppressed he fled to Turkey whence he was demanded
by the Austrian government as a refugee and traitor. The Turkish
authorities, however, refused to give him up but agreed that he should
be sent into exile to some foreign land never to return. Koszta chose
the United States as his asylum, came hither, and took out partial but
not complete papers of naturalization. In 1854 he returned to Tur-
key, contrary — as it was alleged — to his former promise. At the city
of Smyrna he received a passport from the American consul residing
there, and went ashore. But the Austrian consul at Smyrna, hearing
* It will be observed that the narrative of Walker's exploits and end, extends nearly
to the conclusion of Buchanan's administration.
472 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of Koszta's arrival and having no power to arrest him on shore, induced
some bandits to seize him and throw him into the water of the bay
where a boat in waiting picked him up and carried him on board an
Austrian frigate. The American officials immediately demanded his
release, which was refused. Thereupon Captain Duncan Ingraham,
commanding the American sloop of war St. Louis, loaded his guns,
pointed them at the Austrian vessel, and was about to make hot work,
Avhen it was agreed by all parties that Koszta should be put in charge
of the French government until his nationality should be decided. In
this condition of affairs the question was given over for discussion to
Baron Hiilseman — the Austrian minister at Washington — and William
L. Marcy, the American secretary of state. The correspondence was
one of the ablest on record and extended, before its termination, to
almost every question affecting naturalization and citizenship, and in-
deed to many other important topics of international law. Mr. Marcy
was completely triumphant in his argument and Koszta was remanded
to the United States. Of so much importance is the life of one many
when it involves the great question of human rights.
In the years 1853-54, the peaceable relations of the United
States and Spain were again endangered by Cuban difficulties. Presi-
dent Pierce believed that owing to the financial embarrassment of the
Spanish government, Cuba might now be purchased at a reasonable
price and annexed to the United States. The delicate business of ne-
gotiating was intrusted at first to Mr. Soul6, the American minister
at Madrid. But afterwards James Buchanan and John Y. Mason were
added to the mission. A convention of the ambassadors of the vari-
ous governments concerned was held at Ostend, and an important in-
strument was there drawn up — chiefly by Mr. Buchanan — known as-
THE Ostend Manifesto. The document was chiefly devoted to an
elaborate statement of the arguments in favor of the purchase and an-
nexation of Cuba by the United States, as a measure of sound wisdom
to both the Spanish and American governments. But nothing of prac-
tical importance resulted from the embassy or the manifesto.
And now the great domain lying west of Minnesota, Iowa and
'Missouri was to be organized into territorial governments. Already
into these vast regions the tide of immigration was pouring, and it be*
came necessary to provide for the future. In January of 1854, Sen-
ator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois brought before the Senate of the
United States a proposition to organize the territories of Kansas and
Nebraska. In the bill reported for this purpose a clause was inserted
providing that the people of the two Territories, in forming their con-
PIERCE'S ADMINISTRATION. 473;
stitutions, should decide for themselves whether the new States should be
free or slaveholdiug. This was a virtual repeal of the Missouri Com-
promise, for both the new territories lay north of the parallel of
thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes. Thus by a single stroke the
old settlement of the slavery question was to be undone. From Jan-
uary until May, Mr. Douglas's report, known as the Kansas-Ne
BEASKA Bill, was debated in Congress. All the bitter sectional
antagonisms of the past were aroused in full force. The bill was
violently opposed by a majority of the representatives from the East
and North; but the minority, uniting with the congressmen of the
South, enabled Douglas to carry his measure through Congress, and
in May of 1854 the bill received the sanction of the President.
Kansas itself now became a battle-field for the contending par-
ties. Whether the new State should admit slavery now depended upon
the vote of the people. Wherefore both factions made a rush for the
territory in order to secure a majority. Kansas was soon filled with
an agitated mass of people, thousands of whom had been sent thither
to vote. An election held in November of 1854 resulted in the choice
of a pro-slavery delegate to Congress, and in the general territorial
election of the following year the same party was triumphant. The
State Legislature thus chosen assembled at Lecompton, organized the
government and framed a constitution permitting slavery. The Free
Soil party, declaring the general election to have been illegal on ac-
count of fraudulent voting, assembled in convention at Topeka, framed
a constitution excluding slavery, and organized a rival government.
Civil war broke out between the factions. From the autumn of 1855
until the following summer the Territory was the scene of constant
turmoil and violence. On the 3d of September the President ap-
pointed John W. Geary of Pennsylvania military governor of Kansas,
with full powers to restore order and punish lawlessness. On his ar-
rival the hostile parties were quieted and peace restored. But the
agitation in the Territory had already extended to all parts of the
Union, and became the issue on which the people divided in the presi-
dential election of 1856.
The parties made ready for the contest. James Buchanan of
Pennsylvania was nominated as the Democratic candidate. By plant-
ing himself on a platform of principles in which the doctrines of the
Kansas-Nebraska Bill were distinctly reaffirmed, he was able to secure
a heavy vote both North and South. For many Northern Democrats,
though opposed to slavery, held firmly to the opinion that the people
of every Territory ought to have the right to decide the question for
• 474 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
themselves. As the candidate of the Free Soil or People's party,
John C. Fremont of California was brought forward. The exclusion
of slavery from all the Territories of the United States by congres-
sional action was the distinctive principle of the Free Soil platform.
Meanwhile, an American or Know-Nothing party had arisen in the
country, the leaders of which, anxious to ignore the slavery question
and to restrict foreign influences in the nation, nominated Millard Fill-
more for the presidency. But the slavery question could not be put
aside; on that issue the people were really divided. A large majority
decided in favor of Mr. Buchanan for the presidency, while the choice
for the vice-presidency fell on John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky.
CHAPTER LX.
BUCHANAN'S ADMINISTRATION, 1857-1861.
JAMES BUCHANAN was a native of Pennsylvania, born on the
13th of April, 1791, educated for the profession of law. In 1831
he was appointed minister to Russia, was afterward elected to the
Senate of the United States, and from that position was called to the
-office of secretary of state under President Polk. In 1853 he received
the appointment of minister to Great Britain, and resided at London
■until his nomination for the presidency. As secretary of state in the
new cabinet. General Lewis Cass of Michigan was chosen.
A few days after the inauguration of the new chief magistrate,
the Supreme Court of the United States delivered the celebrated opin-
ion known in American history as the Deed Scott Decision. Dred
Scott, a negro, had been held as a slave by Dr. Emerson of Missouri,
-a surgeon in the United States army. On the removal of Emerson to
Rock Island, Illinois, and afterwards, in 1836, to Fort Snelling, Min-
nesota, Scott was taken along ; and at the latter place he and a negro
woman, who had been bought by the surgeon, were married. Two
children were born of the marriage, and then the whole family were
taken back to St. Louis and sold. Dred thereupon brought suit for
his freedom. The cause was heard in the circuit and supreme courts
of ^Missouri, and, in May of 1854, was appealed to the Supreme Court
of the United States. After a delav of nearlv three vears a decision
was finally reached in March of 1857. Chief-Justice Taney, speaking
BUCHANAN'S ADMINISTRATION. 475
for the court, decided that negroes, whether free or slave, were not cit-
izens of the United States, and that they could not become such by any
process known to the Constitution; that under the laws of the United
States a negro could neither sue nor be sued, and that therefore the
court had no jurisdiction of Dred Scott's cause ; that a slave was to
be regarded in the light of a personal chattel, and that he might be
removed from place to place by his owner as any other piece of prop-
erty ; that the Constitution gave to every slave-holder the right of re-
moving to or through any State or Territory with his slaves, and of
returning at his will with them to a State where slavery was recog-
nized by law; and that therefore the Missouri Compromise of 1820,
as well as the compromise measures of 1850, was unconstitutional and
void. In these opinions six of the associate justices of the supreme
bench — Wayne, Nelson, Grier, Daniel, Campbell, and Catron — con-
•curred ; while two associates — Judges McLean and Curtis — dissented.
The decision of the majority, which was accepted as the opinion of
the court, gave great satisfaction to the ultra slave-holding sentiments
of the South, but excited in the North thousands of indignant com-
ments and much bitter opposition.
In the first year of Buchanan's administration there Avas a Mor-
mon rebellion in Utah. The difficulty arose from an attempt to ex-
tend the judicial system of the United States over the Territory. Thus
far Brigham Young, the Mormon governor, had had his own way of
administering justice. The community of Mormons was organized on
a plan very different from that existing in other Territories, and many
usages had grown up in Utah which were repugnant to the laws of
the country. When, therefore, a Federal judge was sent to preside
in the Territory, he was resisted, insulted and driven violently from
the seat of justice. The other officials of the Federal government
were also expelled, and the Territory became the scene of a reign
of terror. The Mormons, however, attempted a justification of their
conduct on the ground that the character of the United States offi-
cers had been so low and vicious as to command no respect. But
the excuse was deemed insufficient, and Brigham Young was super-
seded in the governorship by Alfred Cumming, superintendent of
Indian affairs on the Upper Missouri. Judge Delana Eckels of In-
diana was appointed chief-justice of the Territory; and an army of
two thousand five hundred men was organized and despatched to
Utah to put down lawlessness by force.
But Young and the Mormon elders were in no humor to give
u]3 their authority without a struggle. The approaching American
476 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
army was denounced as a horde of barbarians, and preparations were
made for resistance. In September of 1857 the national forces reached
the Territory; and on the 6th of October a company of Mormon ran-
gers made good the threats of Young by attacking and destroying
most of the supply trains of the army. Winter came on, and the
Federal forces, under command of Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston,
were obliged to find quarters on Black's Fork, near Fort Bridges.
Meanwhile, however, the President had despatched Thomas L. Kane
of Pennsylvania with conciliatory letters to the Mormons. Going by
way of California, he reached Utah in the spring of 1858, and in a
short time succeeded in bringing about a good understanding between
Governor Gumming and the insurgents. In the latter part of May,
Governor Powell of Kentucky and Major McCulloch of Texas ar-
rived at the quarters of the army, bearing from the President a proc-
lamation of pardon to all \\\io would submit to the national authority.
The passions of the Mormons had by this time somewhat subsided
and they accepted the overture. In the fall of 1858 the army pro-
ceeded to Salt Lake City, but was soon afterwards quartered at Camp
Floyd, forty miles distant. The Federal forces remained at this place
until order was entirely restored, and in May of 1860 were withdrawn
from the Territory.
Early in 1858 an American vessel, while innocently exploring-
the Paraguay River, in South America, was fired on by a jealous gar-
rison. When reparation for the insult was demanded, none was given,
and the government of the United States was obliged to send out a
fleet to obtain satisfaction. A commissioner was sent with the squad-
ron who was empowered to offer liberal terms of settlement for the
injury. The authorities of Paraguay quailed before the American
flag, and suitable apologies were made for the wrong which had been,
committed.
The 5th of August, 1858, was a memorable day in the history
of the w'orld. On that day was completed the laying of the firsT'
TELEGRAPHIC CABLE across the Atlantic Ocean. The successful ac-
complishment of this great w^ork was due in a large measure to the
energy and genius of Cyrus W. Field, a wealthy merchant of New
York. The cable, one thousand six hundred and forty miles in
length, Avas stretched from Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, to Valentia
Bay, Ireland. Telegraphic communication Avas thus established be-
tween the Old World and the New, and the fraternal greetings of
peaceful nations were for the first time transmitted through the
depths of the sea.
BUCHANAN'S ADMINISTRATION.
477
In 1858 Minnesota was added to the Union. The area of the new
State was a little more than eighty-one thousand square miles, and its
population at the date of admission a hundred and fifty thousand souls.
In the next year Ore-
gon, the thirty-third
State, was admitted,
with a population of
forty-eight thousand,
and an area of eighty
thousand square miles.
On the 4th of the pre-
ceding March General
Sam Houston of Texas
bade adieu to the Sen-
ate of the United
States and retired to
private life. His ca-
reer had been marked
by the strangest vicis-
situdes. He was a
Virginian by birth,
but his youth was
hardened among the
mountains of Tennes-
see. He gained a mil-
itary fame in the Sem-
inole War, then rose
to political distinction, and was elected governor of his adopted State.
Overshadowed with a domestic calamity, he suddenly resigned his office,
left his home, and exiled himself among the Cherokees, by whom he was
made a chief. Afterward he went to Texas, joined the patriots, and be-
came a leading spirit in the struggle for independence. It was he who
commanded in the decisive battle of San Jacinto; he who became first
president of Texas, and also her first representative in the Senate of the
United States. Through all the misfortunes, dangers and trials of his
life his character stood like adamant.
In the fall of 1859 the people of the United States were called
to mourn the death of Washington Irving, the Prince of Amer-
ican Letters. For full fifty years the powers of his sublime genius
had been unremittingly devoted to the great work of creating for his
native land a literature that should adorn and glorify his own and
GENERAL SAM HOUSTON.
478
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
after ages. On both sides of the Atlantic, in every civilized country^
his name had become familiar as a household word. He it was, first
of all, who wrung from the reluctant and prescriptive reviews of
England and Scot-
land an acknowledg-
ment of the power
and originality of
Amercan genius. The
literature of the New
"World was no longer
a scoif and a by-word
when Murray, the
bookseller of London,,
was obliged to pay
for the manuscript of
" Bracebridge Hall "
— which he had not
yet seen — the sum of
a thousand guineas.
Except Sir Walter
Scott and Lord Byron
no other author of
Irving's times re-
ceived such a munifi-
cent reward for his labor — no other was so much praised and loved.
Whether as humorist or writer of prose fiction, historian or biogra-
pher, his name ranks among the noblest and brightest of the world.
When the petty revolutions of society and the bloody conflicts of the
battle field are forgotten, the monument which the affections of his
countrymen have reared to the memory of the illustrious Irving shall
stand unshaken and untarnished, transmitting to all after times the
record of his virtues and achievements.
From the beginning the new administration had stormy times.
The slavery question continued to vex the nation. The Dred Scott
Decision, to which the President had looked as a measure calculated
to allay the excitement, had only added fuel to the flame. In some
of the Free States the opposition rose so high that Personal Lib-
erty Bills were passed, the object of which was to defeat the exe-
cution of the Fugitive Slave law. In the fall of 1859 the excitement
was still further increased by the mad attempt of John Brown of
Kansas to excite a general insurrection among the slaves. With a
WASHINGTON IRVING.
BUCHANAN'S ADMINISTRATION. 479.
party of twenty-one men as daring as himself, lie made a sudden de-
scent on the United States arsenal at Harjjer's Ferry, captured the
place, and held his ground for nearly two days. The national troops
and the militia of Virginia were called out in order to suppress the
revolt. Thirteen of Brown's men were killed, two made their escape,
and the rest were captured. The leader and his six companions were
given over to the authorities of Virginia, tried, condemned and
hanged. In Kansas the old controversy still continued, but the Free
Soil party gained ground so rapidly as to make it certain that slavery
would be interdicted from the State. All these facts and events
tended to widen the breach between the people of the North and the
South. Such was the alarming condition of affairs when the time
arrived for holding the nineteenth presidential election.
The canvass was one of intense excitement. Four candidates
were presented. The choice of the People's party — now called Re-
publican— was Abraham Lincoln of Illinois. The platform of prin-
ciples adopted by this party again declared opposition to the extension
of slavery to be the vital issue. In the month of April the Democratic
convention assembled at Charleston. The delegates were divided on
the question of slavery, and after much debating the party was dis-
rupted. The Southern delegates, unable to obtain a distinct expres-
sion of their views in the platform of principles, and seeing that the
Northern wing was determined to nominate Mr. Douglas — the great
defender of popular sovereignty — withdrew from the convention. The
rtjst continued in session, balloted for a while for a candidate, and on
t]ie 3d of May adjourned to Baltimore, where the delegates, reassem-
bling on the 18th of June, chose Douglas as their standard-bearer in
the approaching canvass. The seceding delegates adjourned first to
Richmond, and afterwards to Baltimore, where they met on the 28th
of June and nominated John C Breckinridge of Kentucky. The
American party — now known as Constitutional Unionists — chose
John Bell of Tennessee as their candidate. The contest resulted in
the election of Mr. Lincoln. He received the electoral votes of all
the Northern States except those of New Jersey, which were divided
between himself and his two opponents. The support of the South-
ern States was for the most part given to Breckinridge. The States
of Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee cast their ballots, thirty-nine
in number, for Mr. Bell. Mr. Douglas received a large popular but
small electoral vote, his supporters being scattered through all the
States without the concentration necessary to carry any. Thus after
controlling the destinies of the Republic for sixty years, with only
480 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the temporary overthrow of 1840, the Democratic party was broken
into fragments and driven from the field.
The result of the election had been anticipated. The leaders of the
South had openly declared that the choice of Lincoln would be regarded
as a just cause for the dissolution of the Union. The Republicans of the
populous North crowded to the polls, and their favorite was chosen. As
to the government, it was under the control of the Douglas Democracy ;
but a majority of the cabinet and a large number of senators and rejjre-
sentatives in Congress were supporters of Mr. Breckinridge and the advo-
cates of disunion as a justifiable measure. It was now evident that with
the incoming of the new administration all the departments of the govern^
ment Avould pass under the control of the Republican party. The times
were full of passion, animosity and rashness. It was seen that disunion
was now possible, and that the possibility would shortly be removed. The
attitude of the President favored the measure. He was not himself a
disunionist. He denied the right of a State to secede ; but at the same
time he declared himself not armed with the constitutional power neces-
sary to prevent secession by force. The interval, therefore, between the
presidential election in November of 1860 and the inauguration of the
following spring was seized by the leaders of the South as the opportune
moment for dissolving the Union.
The actual work of secession began in South Carolina. On the
17th of December, 1860, a convention assembled at Charleston, and after
three days of deliberation passed a resolution that the union hitherto
existing between South Carolina and the other States, under the name of
the United States of America, was dissolved. It was a step of fearful
importance. The action was contagious. The sentiment of disunion
sjiread with great rapidity. The cotton-growing States were almost
unanimous in support of the measure. By the 1st of February, 1861,
.six other States — Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and
Texas — had passed ordinances of secession and withdrawn from the
Union. Nearly all of the senators and representatives of those States,
following the action of their constituents, resigned their seats in Congress
and gave themselves to the disunion cause.
In the secession conventions there was but little opposition to the .
movement. In some instances a considerable minority vote was cast. A .
few of the speakers boldly denounced disunion as bad in principle and
ruinous in its results. The course of Alexander H. Stephens, afterward
Vice-President of the Confederate States, was peculiar. In the con-
vention of Georgia he undertook the task of preventing the secession of
Jiis State. He delivered a long and powerful oration in which he de-
BUCHANAN'S ADMINISTRATION.
481
fended the theory of secession, advocated the doctrine of State sove-
reignty, declared his intention of abiding by the decision of the conven-
tion, but at the same
time spoke against se-
cession, on the ground
that the measure was
impolitic, unwise, dis-
astrous. Not a few
prominent men at the
South held similar
views; but the oppo-
site opinion prevailed,
and secession, was ac-
complished.
On the 4th of
February, 1861, dele-
gates from six of the
seceded States assem-
bled at Montgomery,
Alabama, and formed
a new government,
under the name of
The Confederate
States of America.
On the 8th of the
month the government
was organized by the election of Jefferson Davis of Mississippi as provis-
ional President, and Alexander H. Stephens as Yice-President. On the
same day of the meeting of the Confederate Congress, at Montgomery, a
peace conference assembled at Washington. Delegates from twenty-one
States were present; certain amendments to the Constitution were pro-
posed and laid before Congress for adoption, but that body gave little heed
to the measures suggested, and the conference adjourned without practical
results.
The country seemed on the verge of ruin. The national govern-
ment was for the time being paralyzed. The army was stationed in de-
tachments on remote frontiers. The fleet was scattered in distant seas.
The President was distracted with hesitancy and the adverse counsels of
his friends. "With the exception of Forts Sumter and Moultrie in
Charleston Harbor, Fort Pickens near Pensacola, and Fortress Monroe in
the Chesapeake, all the important posts in the seceded States had been
81
ALEXANDER H. STEPHENS.
482 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
seized by the Confederate authorities, even before the organization of their
government. All this while the local warfare in Kansas had continued ;
but the Free State party had at last gained the ascendency, and the early
admission of the new commonwealth, with two additional Republican
senators, was foreseen. Early in January the President made a feeble
attempt to reinforce and provision tlie garrison of Fort Sumter. The
steamer Star of the West was sent with men and supplies, but in approach-
ing the harbor of Charleston was fired on by a Confederate battery and
compelled to return. Thus in gloom and grief, and the upheavals of
revolution, the administration of Buchanan drew to a close. Such was
the dreadful condition of affairs that it was deemed prudent for the new
President to approach the capital without recognition. For the first time
in the history of the nation the chief magistrate of the republic slipped
into \Yashington city by night.
CHAPTER LXI.
LINCOLN'S ADMINISTRATION, AND THE CIVIL WAR, 1861-1865.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, sixteenth President of the United States,
was a native of Kentucky, born in the county of Larue, on the
12th of February, 1809. His ancestors had emigrated thither from
Rockingham County, Virginia : both father and mother were Virgin-
ians by birth. The childhood of the future President was passed in
utter obscurity. In 1816 his father removed to Spencer County, In-
diana— just then admitted into the Union — and built a cabin in the
woods near the present village of Gentryville. Here was the scene
of Lincoln's boyhood — a constant struggle with poverty, hardship, and
toil. At the age of sixteen we find him managing a ferry across the
Ohio, at the mouth of Anderson Creek — a service for which he was
paid six dollars per month. In his youth he received in the aggregate
about one year of schooling, which was all he ever had in the way of
education. In the year of his majority he removed with his father's
family to the north fork of the Sangamon, ten miles west of Decatur,
Illinois. Here another log-house was built and a small farm cleared
LINCOLN'S ADMINISTRATION.
483
and fenced ; and here Abraham Lincohi began for himself the hard
battle of life.
The uncleared forest, the unbroken soil,
The iron bark that turns the lumberer's axe,
The rapid that o'erbears the boatman's toil,
The prairie, hiding the mazed wanderer's ti-acks,
The ambuslied Indian, and the prowling bear; —
Such were the needs that helped his youth to train —
Eough culture ! — but such trees large fruit may bear.
If but their stocks be of right girth and grain !
After serving as a flatboatraan on the Mississijjpi, Lincoln re-
turned to New Salem, twenty miles from Springfield, and became
a clerk in a country
store. Then, as cap-
tain of a company of
volunteers, he served
in the Black Hawk
war. From 1833 to
1836 he was engaged
in merchandising, but
a dissolute partner
brought him to bank-
ruptcy. Turning his
attention to the prac-
tice of the law, for
which p r o f e s s i o n
he had always had a
liking, he gradually
gained the attention
of his fellow-men and
soon rose to distinc-
tion. His peculiar
power — manifested at
all periods of his life —
of seizing the most difficult thought and presenting it in such quaint
and homely phrase as to make the truth appreciable by all men, made
him a natural leader of the people. As candidate for the office of
United States senator from Illinois he first revealed to the nation, in
his great debates with Senator Douglas, the full scope and originality
of his genius. Now, at the age of fifty-two, he found laid upon him
ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
484 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
such a burden of care and responsibility as had not been borne by
any ruler of modern times. On the occasion of his inauguration he
delivGi'ed a long and thoughtful address, declaring his fixed purpose
to uphold the Constitution, enforce the laws, and preserve the integ-
rity of the Union.
The new cabinet was organized with William H. Seward of New
York as secretary of state. Salmon P. Chase of Ohio was chosen sec-
retary of the treasury, and Simon Cameron secretary of war ; but he,
in the following January, w^as succeeded in office by Edwin M. Stan-
ton. The secretaryship of the navy was conferred on Gideon Welles.
In his inaugural address and first official papers the President indi-
cated the policy of the new administration by declaring his purpose
to repossess the forts, arsenals and public property which had been
seized by the Confederate authorities. It was with this purpose that
the first military preparations were made. In the mean time, on the
12th of March, an effort was made by commissioners of the seceded
States to obtain from the national government a recognition of their
independence ; but the negotiations were unsuccessful. Then followed
a second attempt on the jiart of the government to reinforce the gar-
rison of Fort Sumter; and with that came the beginning of actual
hostilities.
The defences of Charleston Harbor were held by Major Robert
Anderson. His entire force amounted to seventy-nine men. Owing
to the weakness of his garrison, he deemed it prudent to evacuate
Fort Moultrie and retire to Sumter. Meanwhile, Confederate volun-
teers had flocked to the city, and powerful batteries had been built
about the harbor. When it became known that the Federal gov-
ernment would reinforce the forts, the authorities of the Confederate
States determined to anticipate the movement by compelling Ander-
son to surrender. Accordingly, on the 11th of April, General P. T.
Beauregard, commandant of Charleston, sent a flag to Fort Sumter,
demanding an evacuation. Major Anderson replied that he should
hold tlie fortress and defend his flag. On the following morning,
at half-past four o'clock, the first gun was fired from a Confederate
battery. A terrific bombardment of thirty-four hours' duration fol-
lowed ; the fort was reduced to ruins, set on fire, and obliged to ca-
pitulate. The honors of war were granted to Anderson and his men,
\,'ho had made a brave and obstinate resistance. Although the can-
nonade had been long continued and severe, no lives were lost either
in the fort or on the shore. Thus the defences of Charleston Harbor
were secured by the Confederates.
LINCOLN'S ADMINISTBATION 485
The news of this startling event went through the country like a
flame of fire. There had been some expectation of violence, but the
actual shock came like a clap of thunder. The people of the towns
poured into the streets and the country folk flocked to the villages
to gather the tidings and to comment on the coming conflict. Gray-
haired men talked gravely of the deed that was done, and prophesied
of its consequences. Public opinion in both the North and the South
was rapidly consolidated. Three days after the fall of Sumter Presi-
dent Lincoln issued a call for seventy-five thousand volunteers to serve
three months in the overthrow of the secession movement. Two days
later Virginia seceded from the Union. On May 6th Arkansas followed
the example, and then North Carolina on the 20th of the same month.
In Tennessee — especially in East Tennessee — there was a powerful op-
position to disunion, and it was not until the 8th of June that a secession
ordinance could be passed. In Missouri, as will presently be seen, the
movement resulted in civil war, while in Kentucky the authorities issued
a proclamation of neutrality. The people of Maryland were divided
into hostile parties, the disunion sentiment being largely prevalent.
On the 19th of April, when the first regiments of Massachusetts
volunteers were passing through Baltimore on their way to Washington,
they were fired upon by the citizens, and three men killed. This was the
first bloodshed of the war. On the day before tliis event a body of Con-
federate soldiers advanced against the armory of the United States at
Harper's Ferry. The officer in command hastily destroyed a portion of
the vast magazine collected there, and then escaped into Pennsylvania.
On the 20th of the month another company of Virginians assailed the
great navy yard at Norfolk. The officers commanding fired the build-
ings and ships, spiked the cannon and withdrew their forces. Most of
the guns and many of the vessels were afterward recovered by the Con-
federates, the property thus captured amounting to fully ten millions of
dollars. So rapidly was Virginia filled with volunteers and troops from
the South that, for a Mdiile, Washington city was in danger of being
taken. But the capital was soon secured from immediate danger; and
on the 3d of May the President issued another call for soldiers. This
time the number was set at eighty-three thousand, and the term of service
at three years or during the war. Lieutenant-General W^infield Scott
was made commander-in-chief. As many war ships as could be provided
were sent to blockade the Southern ports. On every side were heard the
notes of preparation. In the seceded States there was boundless and in-
cessant activity. Already the Southern Congress had adjourned from
Montgomery, to meet on the 20th of July at Richmond, which was
486 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
chosen as the capital of the Confederacy. To that place had already
come Mr. Davis and the officers of his cabinet, for the purpose of direct-
ing the affairs of the government and the army. So stood the antag-
onistic powers in the beginning of June, 1861. It was now evident to
all men (how slow they had been to believe it !) that a great war, perhaps
the greatest in modern times, was impending over the nation. It is
appropriate to look briefly into the Causes of the approaching conflict.
CHAPTER LXII.
CA USES.
THE first and most general cause of the civil war in the United States
was the different construction put upon the national Constitution by the
people of the North and the South. A difference of opinion had always
existed as to how that instrument was to be understood. The question
at issue was as to the relation between the States and the general govern-
ment. One party held that under the Constitution the Union of the
States is indissoluble ; that the sovereignty qf the nation is lodged in the
central government; that the States are subordinate; that the acts of
Congress, until they are repealed or pronounced unconstitutional by the
supreme court, are binding on the States ; that the highest allegiance of
the citizen is due to the general government, and not to his own State ;
and that all attempts at nullification and disunion are in their nature dis-
loyal and treasonable. The other party held that the national Constitu-
tion is a compact between sovereign States ; that for certain reasons the
Union may be dissolved ; that the sovereignty of the nation is lodged in
the individual States, and not in the central government ; that Congress
can exercise no other than delegated powers ; that a State feeling ag-
grieved may annul an act of Congress ; that the highest allegiance of the
citizen is due to his own State, and afterward to the general government ;
and that acts of nullification and disunion are justifiable, revolutionary
and honorable.
Here was an issue in its consequences the most fearful that ever
disturbed a nation. It struck right into the vitals of the government.
LINCOLN'S ADMINISTRATION. 487
It threatened with each renewal of the agitation to undo the whole civil
structure of the United States. For a long time the parties who disputed
about the meaning of the Constitution were scattered in various section^.
In the earlier history of the country the doctrine of State sovereignty was
most advocated in New England. "With the rise of the tariff question
the position of parties changed. Since the tariff— a congressional mea-
sure—favored the Eastern States at the expense of the South, it came to
pass naturally that the people of New England passed over to the advo-
cacy of national sovereignty, while the people of the South took up the
doctrine of State rights. Thus it happened that as early as 1831 the right
of nullifying an act of Congress was openly advocated in South Carolina,
and thus also it happened that the belief in State sovereignty became more
prevalent in the South than in the North. These facts tended powerfully
to produce sectional parties and to bring them into conflict.
A second general cause of the civil war was the different system of
labor in the North and in the South. In the former section the laborers
were freemen, citizens, voters ; in the latter, bondmen, property, slaves.
In the South the theory was that the capital of a country should own the
labor; in the North that both labor and capital are free. In the begin-
ning all the colonies had been slaveholding. In the Eastern and Middle
States the system of slave-labor was gradually abolished, being unprofit-
able. In the five great States formed out of the North-western Territory
slavery was excluded by the original compact under which that Territory
was organized. Thus there came to be a dividing line drawn through
the Union east and west. It was evident, therefore, that whenever the
question of slavery was agitated a sectional division would arise between
the parties, and that disunion and war would be threatened. The danger
arising from this source was increased and the discord between the sections
aggravated by several subordinate causes.
The first of these was the invention of the Cotton Gik. In
1793, Eli Whitney, a young collegian of Massachusetts, went to Georgia,
and resided with the family of Mrs. Greene, widow of General Greene,
of the Revolution. While there his attention was directed to the tedious
and difficult process of picking cotton by hand— that is, separating the
seed from the fibre. So slow was the process that the production of up-
land cotton was nearly profitless. The industry of the cotton-growing
States was paralyzed by the tediousness of preparing the product for the
market. Mr. Whitney undertook to remove the difficulty, and succeeded
in inventing a gin which astonished the beholder by the rapidity and
excellence of its work. From being profitless, cotton became the most
profitable of all the staples. The industry of the South was revolution-
488 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ized. Before the civil war it was estimated that Whitney's gin had
added a thousand millions of dollars to the revenues of the Southern
States. The American crop had grown to be seven-eighths of all the
cotton produced in the world. Just in proportion to the increased profit-
ableness of cotton slave-labor became important, slaves valuable and the
system of slavery a fixed and deep-rooted institution.
From this time onward there was constant danger that the slavery
question would so embitter the politics and legislation of the country as
to bring about disunion. The danger of such a result was fully mani-
fested in THE Missouri Agitation of 1820-21. Threats of dissolving
the Union were freely made in both the North and the South — in the
North, because of the proposed enlargement of the domain of slavery ; in
the South, because of the proposed rejection of Missoiu'i as a slave-holding
State. When the Missouri Compromise was enacted, it was the hope of
Mr. Clay and his fellow-statesmen to save the Union by removing for ever
the slavery question from the politics of the country. In that they suc-
ceeded for a while.
Next came the Nullification Acts of South Carolina. And
these, too, turned upon the institution of slavery and the profitableness of
cotton. The Southern States had become cotton-producing ; the Eastern
States had given themselves to manufacturing. The tariff measures
favored manufactures at the expense of producers. Mr. Calhoun and his
friends proposed to remedy the evil complained of by annulling the laws
of Congress. His measures failed ; but another compromise was found
necessary in order to allay the animosities which had been awakened.
The Annexation of Texas, with the consequent enlargement of
the domain of slavery, led to a renewal of the agitation. Those who
opposed the Mexican War did so, not so much because of the injustice of
the conflict as because of the fact that thereby slavery would be extended.
Then, at the close of the war, came another enormous acquisition of
territory. Whether the same should be made into free or slave-holding
States was the question next agitated. This controversy led to the passage
of the Omnibus Bill, by which again for a brief period the excitement
was allayed.
In 1854 THE Kansas-Nebraska bill was passed. Thereby the
Missouri Compromise was repealed and the whole question opened anew.
Meanwliile, the character and the civilization of the Northern and the
Southern people had become quite different. In population and wealth
the North had far outgrown the South. In the struggle for territorial
dominion the North had gained a considerable advantage. In 1860 the
division of the Democratic party made certain the election of ]Mr. Lincoln
1857
FredericU M'illiani
60. Ti-e
Bfapoieou III.
Victoria.
58. Mutiny in the E
61
IV,
atf of Peace between Clii
01. William I.
62. Death of l*riiic
ast India arm v.
JAMES BITCH AXAX,
President.
Jobn CMtreckinridge,
Vice-President.
.57. The Dred Scott De-
cision
65
CiC. War between
and Austria.
07. Hanover
na and England.
CS. For
65. Fenian troubles in Ire
e Albert, the Consort.
68. Pas
69
Prussia 71. Kin^
Ell
70. Beginning of '
absorbed by Prussia.
mation of a Xortli G(
land. 70. |j^ S'edan.
70. Downfall of
71.
,Tre:
sage of the Reform Bil
70. Disestablishiii
71. Bill fori
72. 1
57. Personal Liberty Bill.
57.
The Mormon rebellion
In Utah.
58. The first Atlan-
tic Telegraph
Cable.
ABRAHAm.I]N'<'01.:\
Hannibal Hamlin, Vi
01. 'I'en of the Southern S
01. The "Star of the West'
61.
61.
61.
61.
61.
Fall of Fort Sumte
Tlie President calls for
The Confederate Cong
The President calls for
Bull Hun.
Ball's Bluff.
62. p^ Mill Spnng.
61. Mason & Slidell capt'd.
61. Kansas admitted into
Fort Donels
62.
62.
62.
62.
58. Troubles with P
59. Wa.shingt
died, age
60. Tl)
m
U
60. Di
D
at
60. Po
60. De
DC
60. So
59. Oreg'oii
Union.
62.
58. Minnesota ad
mitted into the
Union.
60. Wal
ten
def eated.
58. The- great camp aign of
Mr. Lincoln and Senator
Douglas.
Pittsburg La
The Monitor
the Merri
Murfreesbor
Front Royal
Fair Oaks.
Seven Days
Antieiam.
Pi-esident.
ce-Presideut.
tales secede,
flred upon.
^ 66. The Atlantic Ca
7.'),000 volunteers.
ess at Montgomery.
500,000 lueu.
ker's fllibus- tiS. The Ema
ng schemes ao lOl Siege
araguay.
on Irving
d76.
e Japanese Com-
ission in tlie
nited Stiites.
^- »wi4 Chick
«.> Y- T» Looko
^='- V^Missio
63. Wes« Vir
63. Pi %Tg
63. P^^e«!/«
63. The Presi
6J. The
64.
64.
sruption of tlie
emocratic Party
Cliarleston.
64
64. She
64.^4
pulation, 31,443,23L «. P«
feat of the Dem- f^, If^
ratic party. ^- S-il
64. I.I
uth Carolina secedes.
admitted into the
64. Ne
^_ ^, ^ , ^ 62. French invasion
5/. Distracted condition of affairs In Mexico.
64. Ma
0.5. Reconstruction of the
ANMREW JOHN.SON
6.5. Amnesty Proclani
the Union.
071. 66. Tenne.sseQ re-ad
nding.
and
■mac. 67. Purchase
ough.
and Port Republic.
68. Imp
battles. 68. The
68. Ark
neipation Proclamat
of Vicksburg.
amauga.
ul Mountain.
nary Ridge.
{finia admitted into the
of Knoxville.
an's raid.
cellorsviUe.
nvades Pennsylvania.
burg.
UETSSE.S S. GRAX
Schuyler Colfax, Vi
09. Tlie Pacific Railro;
69. Edwin M.Stanton
ble laid.
70. The Fifteentl
70. Robert E. L<
70. Admiral Fan
70. Virginia, Mis
dent orders a draft for 200,
President calls for 300.000
Dalton, Resaca.
Dallas, Kencsaw. ,
Siege of Atlanta.
Franklin.
JVashrille. 67. Webraska
r man's march.
Fort McAllister.
Petersburg.
Mobile Bay.
Fort Fisher.
The Alabama and the Ke
The Wilderness.
Cold Harbor.
NCOE.V re-elected.
Five Forks.
- Lee's surrender.
6-5. President Lincoln a.ssa
va4la admitted into the
70. Population,
seceded States undertak
President after April
ation.
mitted into the Union
1
of Alaska.
eachment of President .
Fourteenth Amendmen
ansas, Alabama, Georgi)
ion.
71. Burning
69. Great monetary pan
Union.
65.
of Mexico.
xinillian elected Emper
67. The Frenc
67. Maximil
72.
T^
72.
w
72.
«
72.
H.
72.
Gi
72.
G
72.
B.
000 troops,
men.
admitted into the Unioi
arsarge.
ssinated.
Union.
or.
h army withdrawn.
ian executed at
Quel
73
77
81
1885
(liani proclaimed
•or.
FraiiC4k-t>russian War
in Confederation.
73. The Iri.sli University
74. Overtlirow of tli
74. UiMi-aeli, Prim
i>oIeoii III.
/ Paris ;
uf Peace.
■ of the Irish Church,
ling tlie sale of Comissio
ilatiou of the United Kin
77. The Kusso-TtirkiKh
77 1?^ Capture of Plevna
"• rM Collapse of the Ot
78. Treaty of San
78. 'I'rcaty of Iter
Bill defeated.
e Gladstone Ministry.
e Minister.
79. The Zulu
79. Death of
79. Death of
79. Accession
79. Overthrow
79. Gladstone
80. Brit
ns.
gdora, 31,4&5,480.
President,
^resident.
t ompleted.
., aged 55.
iLmendment adopted.
uied, aged 63.
•t died, aged 69.
appi, and Texas re-admilt
58,371.
i3y the President.
:S65.
RIJTHERFOltD B. H
William A. Wlieeler,
77. The disputed Presiden
77. New policy adopted
77. Tlae great Railroad Str
ed into the Union.
nson.
idopted.
i;iorida, Louisiana, Nortli
•I Chicago.
in New York City.
[Alabama Claims settl
imi H. Seward died, aged
A NT re-elected.
Henry Wilson, Vice-
Bee Greeley died, aged 61.
Iral George G. Meade died,
8t fire in Boston.
Wary dispute between
Modoc War.
The Credit Mobilier in
Chief -J ustice Chase di
Great financial crisis.
74. Charles Sumner
76. The
76. The
76. Col
76. Cen
War breaks out.
by the Russians,
toman Empire.
stefaiio.
liu.
War.
the Prince Imperial.
Pius IX.
of Leo XIII.
of the Disraeli Ministry.
Premier of England,
ish troubles in Afghanistan.
81. Assassination of the [Czar of Russia.
81. Acces.sion of Alexander III.
AYES, President.
Vice-President.
.TAMICSA.OARFIEI.n
Chester A. Arthur, Vi
cy is settled by a Joint Hi
toward the Southern Stat
ikes and Riots.
81. President Garfield assas
77. The Nez Peroe Wa
77. Great financial depres
77. Oliver P. Morton died.
78. The act remonet
78. The Halifax Fis
lars against the
78. William Cullen
78. The Yellow Fev
78. Bayard Taylor
78. Establishment
78. The Life-saving
Carolina, and South .Carol
ed.
71,
79. Resumpti
77-79. Tour of
79. Zachariah
80. The
80. The
President, died Novemb
aged 57.
the United States and Gre
President.
ce-President.
gh Commission.
es
sinated.
sion in the countiy.
aged 54.
CHESTER A.ARTHUR
19, 1881.
izing silver passed by Con
hery Commission make
United States.
Bryant died, aged 84.
er scourges the Southern
died, aged 54.
of a Chine.se Embassy in
Service established by the
ina re-admitted into the
President after September
gress.
an award of 5,500,000 dol-
States.
the United States.
Government.
Union.
on of Specie Payments by
General Grant around tli
Chandler died.
Refunding Question in Co
Tenth Census: Populatio
er 22, 1875.
vests gation.
ed, aged 65.
died, aged 63.
Sionx War.
Custer Massacre.
orado admitted into the
teiinial Celebration at
at Britain settled.
81. Matt. H. Carpenter
Union.
Philadelphia.
the Government.
e world.
n gress.
n, 50,152,866.
died.
CB[iVKT VI
NATIONAL PERIOD -THIRD SECTION.
A. D. 1857-1885.
LINCOLN'S ADMINISTRATION. 48?
by the votes of the Northern States. The people of the South were
exasperated at the choice of a chief-magistrate whom they regarded a&
indifferent to their welfare and hostile to their interests.
The third general cause of the civil war was the want of intercourse
between the people of the North and the South. The great railroads and
thoroughfares ran east and west. Emigration flowed from the East to the
West. Between the North and the South there was little travel or inter-
change of opinion. From want of acquaintance the people, without in-
tending it, became estranged, jealous, suspicious. They misjudged each
other's motives. They misrepresented each other's beliefs and purposes.
They suspected each other of dishonesty and ill-will. Before the out-
break of the war the people of the two sections looked upon each other
almost in the light of different nationalities.
A fourth cause was found in the publication of sectional boohs. Dur-
ing the twenty years preceding the war many works w^ere published, both
in the North and the South, whose popularity depended wholly on the-
animosity existing between the two sections. Such books were generally
filled with ridicule and falsehood. The manners and customs, language
and beliefs, of one section were held up to the contempt and scorn of the
people of the other section. The minds of all classes, especially of the
young, were thus prejudiced and poisoned. In the North the belief was
fostered that the South was given up to inhumanity, ignorance and bar-
barism, while in the South the opinion prevailed that the Northern people
were a selfish race of mean, cold-blooded Yankees.
11. The evil influence of demagogues may be cited as the fifth general
cause of the war. It is the misfortune of republican governments that
they many times fall under the leadership of bad men. In the United
States the demagogue has enjoyed special opportunities for mischief, and
the people have suffered in proportion. From 1850 to 1860 American
statesmanship and patriotism were at a low ebb. Many ambitious and
scheming men had come to the front, taken control of the political parties
and proclaimed themselves the leaders of public opinion. Their purposes
were wholly selfish. The welfare and peace of the country were put aside
as of no value. In order to gain power and keep it many unprincipled
men in the South were anxious to destroy the Union, while the dema-
gogues of the North were willing to abuse the Union in order to accom-
plish their own bad purposes. Such, in brief, were the causes which led.
to the civil war, one of the most terrible conflicts of modern times.
490
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER LXIII.
FIRST YEAR OF TEE WAR.
ON the 24th of May the Union army crossed the Potomac from Wash-
ington city to Alexandria. At this time Fortress Monroe, at the
mouth of James River, was held by twelve thousand men, under command
of General B. F. Butler. At Bethel Church, in the immediate viciu-
ity,was stationed a detachment of Con-
federates commanded by General Ma-
gruder. On the 10th of June a body
of Union troops was sent to dislodge
them, but was repulsed with consider-
able loss. Meanwhile the conquest of
West Virginia had been undertaken
by General George B. M'Clellan,
In the last days of May General T.
A. Morris moved forward from Parkers-
burg to Grafton with a force of Ohio and
pJ Indiana troops, and on the 3d of June
j^ came upon the Confederates stationed at
Philippi. After a brief engagement the
Federals were successful ; the Confede-
rates retreated toward the mountains. General McClellan now arrived,
took command in person, and on the 11th of July gained a victory at Rich
Mountain. General Garnett, the Confederate commander, fell back with
his forces to Carrick's Ford, on Cheat River, made a stand, was again de-
feated and himself killed in the battle. On the 10th of August General
Floyd, commanding a detachment of Confederates at Carnifex Ferr}', on
Gauley River, was attacked by General Rosecrans and obliged to retreat.
On the 14th of September a division of Confederates under General Rob-
ert E. Lee was beaten in an engagement at Cheat Mountain — an action
which completed the restoration of Federal authority in West Virginia.
In the mean time, other movements of vast importance had taken place.
In the beginning of June General Robert Patterson marched from
Chambersburg with the intention of recapturing Harper's Ferry. On
the 11th of the month a division of the army commanded by Colonel
SCKNE OF OPEKATIOKS IN WEST
VIKGIMA, 1861.
FIRST YEAR OF THE WAR.
491
Lewis Wallace made a sudden and successful onset upon a detachment
of Confederates stationed at Romney. Patterson then crossed the Poto-
mac with the main body, entered the Shenandoah Valley, and pressed
back the Confederate forces to Winchester. Thus far there had been
only petty engagements, skirmishes and marching. The time had now
come when the first great battle of the war was to be fought.
After the Union successes in West Virginia the main body of the
Confederates, under command of General Beauregard, was concentrated
at Manassas Junction, on the Orange Railroad, twenty-seven miles west
of Alexandria. Another large force, commanded by General Joseph E.
Johnston, was within supporting distance in the Shenandoah Valley. The
Union army at Alexandria was commanded by General Irwin McDowell,
while General Patterson was stationed in front of Johnston to watch his
movements and prevent his forming
a junction with Beauregard. On the
16th of July the national army moved
forward. Two days afterward an
unimportant engagement took place
between Centreville and Bull Run.
The Unionists then pressed on, and on
the morning of the 21st came upon
the Confederate army, strongly posted
between Bull Run and Manassas
Junction. A general battle ensued,
continuing with great severity until
noonday. At that hour the advan-
tage was with McDowell, and it
seemed not unlikely that the Confed-
erates would suffer a complete defeat.
But in the crisis of the battle General Johnston arrived with nearly six
thousand fresh troops from the Shenandoah Valley. The tide of victory
turned immediately, and in a short time McDowell's whole army was
hurled back in utter rout and confusion. A ruinous panic spread through
the defeated host. Soldiers and citizens, regulars and volunteers, horsemen
and footmen, rolled back in a disorganized mass into the defences of
Washington. The Union loss in killed, wounded and prisoners amounted
to two thousand nine hundred and fifty-two ; that of the Confederates to
two thousand and fifty.
Great was the humiliation of the North, and greater the rejoicing of
the South. For a while the Federal government was more concerned about
its own safety than about the conquest of Richmond. In that city, on the
VICINITY OF MANASSAS JUNCTION, 1861.
492
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
day before tlie battle, the new Confederate government was organized. In
the Southern Congress and cabinet were many men of distinguislied abil-
ities. Jefferson Davis, the President, was a far-sighted man, of wide expe-
rience in the affairs of state, and considerable reputation as a soldier. He
had led the troops of Mississippi in the Mexican War, had served in both
houses of the national Congress, and as a member of President Pierce's
cabinet. His talents, decision of character and ardent advocacy of State
rights had made him a
natural leader of the
South.
The next milita-
ry movements were
made in Missouri.
That commouAvealth,
though slaveholding,,
still retained its place
in the Union. A con-
vention, called by
Governor Jackson in
accordance with an act
of the legislature, had
in the previous IMarch
refused to pass an or-
dinance of secession^
^p' The disuniouists, how-
ever, were numerous-
and powerful; the
governor favored their
cause, and the State
became a battle-field
for the contending
parties. Both Federal and Confederate camps were organized, and hos-
tilities began in several places. By capturing the United States arsenal
at Liberty, in Clay county, the Confederates obtained a considerable sup-
ply of arms and ammunition. By the formation of Camp Jackson, near
St. Louis, the arsenal in that city was also endangered ; but by the vigi-
lance of Captain Nathaniel Lyon the arms and stores were sent up the
river to Alton, and thence to Springfield. Camp Jackson was soon after-
ward broken up by the exertions of the same officer.
The lead-mines in the south-west part of the State became an object
of great imjiortanee to the Confederates, who, in order to secure them.
JKFFBRSON DAVIS.
FIRST YEAR OF THE WAR.
493
hurried up large bodies of troops from Arkansas and Texas. On the 17th
of June Lyon encountered Governor Jackson with a Confederate force at
Booneville, and gained a decided advantage. On the 5th of July the
Unionists, led by Colonel Franz Sigel, were again successful in a severe
engagement with the governor at Carthage. On the 10th of August the
hardest battle thus far fought in the West occurred at Wilson's Creek, a
short distance south of Springfield. General Lyon made a daring but
rash attack on a much superior force of Confederates under command of
Generals McCullough and Price. The Federals at first gained the field
against heavy odds, but General Lyon was killed, and his men retreated
under direction of Sigel.
Price
General Jr'rice now
pressed northward across the
State to Lexington, on the
Missouri Hiver. This place
Avas defended by a force of
Federals two thousand six
hundred strong, commanded
by Colonel Mulligan. A
stubborn defence was made
by the garrison, but Mulligan
was soon obliged to capitulate.
Price then turned southward,
and on the 16th of October
Lexington was retaken by
the Federals. General John
C. Fremont, who had been
appointed to the command of
SCENE OF OPERATIONS IN THE SOUTH-WEST, 1861.
the Union forces in Missouri, followed the Confederates as fav as Spring-
field, and was on the eve of making an attack, when he was superseded
by General Hunter. The latter, after retreating to St. Louis, was in turn
superseded by General Halleck on the 18th of November. It was now
Price's turn to fall back toward Arkansas. The only remaining move-
ment of importance was at Belmont, on the Mississippi.
The Confederate general Polk, acting under orders of his govern-
ment, had, notwithstanding that State's neutrality, entered Kentucky with
an army, and had captured the town of Columbus. Batteries planted here
commanded the Mississippi. The Confederates gathered in force at Bel-
mont, on the opposite bank. In order to dislodge them Colonel Ulys-
ses S. Grant, with a brigade of three thousand Illinois troops, was sent by
way of Cairo into Missouri. On the 7th of November he made a vigor-
494 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ous and successful attack on the Confederate camp ; but General Polk
sent reinforcements across the river, the guns of Columbus were brought
to bear on the Union position, and Grant was obliged to retreat.
The rout at Bull Run had the effect to quicken the energies of the
North, and troops were rapidly hurried to Washington. The aged Gen-
eral Scott, unable to bear the burden resting upon him, retired from active
duty, and General McClellan was called from West Virginia to take com-
mand of the Army of the Potomac. By the middle of October his forces
had increased to a hundred and fifty thousand men. On the 21st of that
month a brigade, numbering nearly two thousand, was thrown across the
Potomac at Ball's BluflP. Without proper support or means of retreat,
the Federals were attacked by a strong force of Confederates under Gen-
eral Evans, driven to the river, their leader. Colonel Baker, killed, and
the whole force routed with terrible loss. Fully eight hundred of Baker's
men wer ; killed, wounded or taken prisoners.
Juring the summer of 1861 the Federal government sent to sea
several important naval expeditions. One of these, commanded by Com-
modore Stringham and General Butler, proceeded to the North Carolina
coast, and on the 29th of August captured the forts at Hatteras Inlet.
On the 7tli of November a second armament, under command of Com-
modore Dupont and General Thomas W. Sherman, entered the harbor of
Port Royal, and captured Forts Walker and Beauregard. Hilton Head,
a point most advantageous for military operations against Charleston and
Savannah, thus fell into the power of the Federals. Around the whole
coast the blockade became so rigorous that commerce and communication
between the Confederate States and foreign nations were almost wholly
cut off. In this juncture of affairs a difficulty arose which brought the
United States and Great Britain to the very verge of war.
The Confederate government had appointed James M. Mason and
John Slidell, formerly senators of the United States, to go abroad as am-
bassadors from the Confederate States to France and England. The envoys
went on board a blockade runner, and escaping from Charleston Harbor,
reached Havana in safety. At that port they took passage on the British
mail steamer Trent, and sailed for Europe. On the 8th of November
the vessel was overtaken by the United States frigate San Jacinto, com-
manded by Captain Wilkes. The Trent was hailed and boarded; the
two ambassadors and their secretaries were seized, transferred to the San
Jacinto, carried to Boston, and imprisoned. The Trent proceeded on her
way to England ; the story of the insult to the British flag was told, and
the whole kingdom burst out in a blaze of wrath.
At first the people of the United States loudly applauded Captain
CAMPAIGNS OF '62.
495
Wilkes, and the government was disposed to defend his action. Had
such a course been taken, war would have been inevitable. The country-
was saved from the
peril by the adroit and
far-reaching diploma-
cy of William H. Sew-
ard, the secretary of
state. When Great
Britain demanded rep-
aration for the insult
and the immediate lib-
eration of the prison-
ers, he replied in a
mild, cautious and very
able paper. It was con-
ceded that the seizure
of Mason and Slidell
was not justifiable ac-
cording to the law of
nations. A suitable
apology was made for
the wrong done, the
Confederate ambassa-
dors were liberated,
put on board a vessel
and sent to their des-
tination. This action of the secretary was both just and politic. The
peril of war went by, and Great Britain was committed to a policy in
regard to the rights of neutral flags which she had hitherto denied and
Avhich the United States had always contended for. So ended the first
year of the civil war.
■WILLIAM H. SEWARD.
CHAPTER LXIV.
CAMPAIGNS OF '6S.
THE Federal forces now numbered about four hundred and fifty thou-
sand men. Of these nearly two hundred thousand, under command
of General McClellan, were encamped in the vicinity of Washington.
Another army, commanded by General Buell, was stationed at Louisville^
496 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Kentucky, and it was in this department that the first military move-
ments of the year were made. On the 9th of January Colonel Humphrey
Marshall, commanding a force of Confederates on Big Sandy River, in
Eastern Kentucky, was attacked and defeated by a body of Unionists, led
by Colonel Garfield. Ten days later another and more important battle
was fought at Mill Spring, in the same section of the State. The Con-
federates were commanded by Generals Crittenden and Zollicoifer, and
the Federals by General George H. Thomas. After a hot engagement,
in which both sides lost heavily, the Confederates suffered a defeat which
was rendered more severe by the loss of Zollicoffer, who fell in the battle.
The next operations were on the Tennessee and the Cumberland.
The former river was commanded at the southern border of Kentucky by
Fort Henry, and the latter by the more important Fort Donelson, ten
miles south of the Tennessee line. At the beginning of the year the cap-
ture of both these places was planned by General Halleck. Early in
February Commodore Foote was sent up the Tennessee with a flotilla of
gunboats, and at the same time General Grant Avas ordered to move for-
ward and co-operate in an attack on Fort Henry. Before the land-forces
were well into position the flotilla compelled the evacuation of the fort,
the Confederates escaping to Donelson. Eighty-three prisoners and a
large amount of stores were captured.
The Federal gunboats now dropped down the Tennessee, took on
supplies at Cairo, and then ascended the Cumberland. Grant pressed on
from Fort Henry, and as soon as the flotilla arrived began the siege of
Fort Donelson. The defences were strong, and well manned by more
than ten thousand Confederates, under General Buckner. Grant's entire
force numbered nearly thirty thousand. On the 14th of February the
gunboats were driven back with considerable loss. Commodore Foote
being among the wounded. On the next day the garrison, hoping to
break through Grant's lines, made a sally, but met a severe repulse. On
the 16th Buckner was obliged to surrender. His army of ten thousand
men became prisoners of war, and all the magazines, stores and guns of
the fort fell into the hands of the Federals. It was the first decided vic-
tory which had been won by the national arms. The immediate result
of the capture was the evacuation of Kentucky and the capital of Tennes-
see by the Confederates.
After his success at Fort Donelson General Grant ascended the Ten-
nessee as far as Pittsburg Landing. In the beginning of April a camp
was established at Shiloh Church, a short distance from the river ; and
here, on the morning of the 6th, the Union army was suddenly attacked
by the Confederates, led by Generals Albert S. Johnston and Beauregard.
CAMPAIGNS OF '62. 497
The onset was at first successful. All day long the battle raged with tre-
mendous slaughter on both sides. The Federals were forced back to the
river, and but for the protection of the gunboats would have been driven
to destruction. Night fell on the scene with the conflict undecided ; but
in this desperate crisis General Buell arrived from Nashville with strong
reinforcements. On the following morning General Grant assumed the
offensive. General Johnston had been killed in the battle, and Beaure-
gard, on whom the command devolved, was obliged to retreat to Corinth.
The losses in killed, wounded and missing in this dreadful conflict were
more than ten thousand on each side. There had never before been such
a harvest of death in the New World.
Events of importance were also taking place on the Mississippi.
When the Confederates evacuated Columbus, Kentucky, they proceeded
to Island Number Ten, a few miles below, and built strong fortifications
commanding the river. On the western shore was the town of New Mad-
rid, which was held by a Confederate force from Missouri. Against
this place General Pope advanced with a body of Western troops, while
Commodore Foote descended the Mississippi with his flotilla to attack
the forts on the island. Pope was entirely successful in his movement,
and gained possession of New Madrid. The land-forces then co-operated
with the gunboats, and for twenty-three days Island Number Ten was
vigorously bombarded. On the 7th of April, when the Confederates
could hold out no longer, they attempted to escape ; but Pope had cut off
retreat, and the entire garrison, numbering about five thousand, was cap-
tured. The Mississippi was thus opened as far down as Memphis, and
that city was taken by the fleet of Commodore Davis on the 6th of the
following June.
In the beginning of the year General Curtis had pushed forward
through Missouri, entered Arkansas and taken position at Pea Ridge,
among the mountains in the north-western angle of the State. Here he
was attacked on the 6th of March by an army of more than twenty thou-
sand Confederates and Indians, under command of Generals McCuUoch,
Mcintosh and Pike. After a hard-fought battle, which lasted for two
days, the Federals were victorious. McCulloch and Mcintosh were both •
killed and their men obliged to retreat toward Texas; but the Union
losses were most severe, and the battle was barren of results.
On the next day after the conflict at Pea Ridge an event occurred
at Fortress Monroe which came near changing the character of naval
warfare. Captain John Ericsson of New York had invented and built a
peculiar war-vessel with a single round tower of iron exposed above the
water-line. Meanwhile, the Confederates had raised the United States
32
498 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
frigate Merrimac, one of the sunken ships at the Norfolk navy yard, and
had plated the sides with an impenetrable mail of iron. This done, the
vessel was sent to attack the Union fleet at Fortress Monroe. Reaching
that place on the 8th of March, the Merrimac, now called the Virginia,
began the work of destruction, and before sunset two valuable vessels, the
Cumberland and the Congress, were sent to the bottom. During the nighty
however, Ericsson's . strange ship, called the Monitor, arrived from New
York, and on the following morning the two iron-clad monsters turned
their terrible enginery upon each other. After fighting for five hours,
the Virginia was obliged to give up the contest and to return badly dam-
aged to Norfolk. Such was the excitement produced by this novel sea-
fight that for a while the whole energies of the navy department were
devoted to building monitors.
Early in 1862 a strong land and naval force, commanded by Gen-
eral Ambrose E. Burnside and Commodore Goldsborough, was sent
against the Confederate garrison of Roanoke Island. On the 8th of Feb-
ruary the squadron reached its destination ; the fortifications on the island
were attacked and carried, and the garrisons, nearly three thousand strong,
taken prisoners. Burnside next proceeded against Newbern, North Car-
olina, and on the 14th of March captured the city after four hours of
severe fighting. Proceeding southward, he reached the harbor of Beau-
fort, carried Fort Macon, at the entrance, and on the 25th of April took
possession of the town.
On the 11th of the same month Fort Pulaski, commanding the
mouth of the Savannah River, surrendered to General Gillmore. By
this important capture the chief emporium of Georgia was effectually
blockaded. But these reverses of the Confederates were trifling in com-
parison with that which they sustained in the loss of the city of New
Orleans. Early in April a powerful squadron, commanded by General
Butler and Admiral Farragut, entered the Mississippi and proceeded as
far as Forts Jackson and St. Philip, thirty miles above the gulf. The
guns of these forts, standing on opposite shores, completely commanded
the river, and obstructions had been placed in the channel. The forty-
five vessels comprising the Federal fleet were brought into position,
and a furious bombardment of the forts was begun. From the 18th to
the 24th of April the fight continued without cessation. At the end of
that time the forts were but little injured, and Farragut undertook the
hazardous enterprise of running past the batteries. In this he succeeded,
breaking the chain across the river and overpowering the Confederate
fleet above the obstructions. On the next day he reached New Orleans
with a portion of his fleet, and took possession of the city. General But-
CAMPAIGNS OF '62. 499
ler became commandant, and the fortifications were manned with fifteen
•thousand Federal soldiers. Three days afterward Forts Jackson and St,
Philip surrendered to Admiral Porter, who had remained below and
prosecuted the siege. The control of the Lower Mississippi and the me-
tropolis of the South was thus recovered by the Federal government.
The Confederates were not going to give up Kentucky without a
struggle. From East Tennessee they invaded the State in two strong
divisions, the one led by General Kirby Smith and the other by General
Bragg. On the 30th of August Smith's army reached Richmond, at-
tacked a force of Federals stationed there, and routed them with heavy
losses, Lexington was taken, and then Frankfort; and Cincinnati was
saved from capture only by the extraordinary exertions of General Wal-
lace. Meanwhile, the army of General Bragg had advanced from Chatta-
nooga to Mumfordsville, where, on the 17th of September, he captured a
Federal division of four thousand five hundred men. From this point
the Confederate general pressed on toward Louisville, and would have
taken the city but for a forced march of General Buell from Tennessee.
The latter arrived with his army only one day ahead of Bragg, but tlaat
one day gave the Unionists the advantage, and the Confederates were
turned back. From the North came reinforcements for Buell's army,
swelling his numbers to a hundred thousand. In the beginning of Octo-
ber he again took the field, the Confederates slowly retiring to Perryville.
At this place, on the 8th of October, Bragg was overtaken, and a severe
but indecisive battle was fought. The retreat was then continued to East
Tennessee, the Confederates sweeping out of Kentucky a train of four
thousand wagons laden with the spoils of the campaign.
In September there were some stirring events in Mississippi. On
the 19th of the month a hard battle was fought at luka between a Fed-
eral army, commanded by Generals Rosecrans and Grant, and a Confed-
erate force, under General Price. The latter was defeated, losing, in addi-
tion to his killed and wounded, nearly a thousand prisoners. General
Rosecrans now took post at Corinth with twenty thousand men, while
General Grant, with the remainder of the Federal forces, proceeded to
Jackson, Tennesse(3. Perceiving this division of the army, the Confede-
rate generals Van Dorn and Price turned about to recapture Corinth.
Advancing for t!iat purpose, they came on the 3d of October upon the
Federal defences. Another obstinately contested battle ensued, which
ended, after two days' fighting and heavy losses on both sides, in the re-
pulse of the Confederates.
In the Qiean time. General Grant had removed his headquarters
from Jackson h) La Grange. His purpose was to co-operate with Gen-
500
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
eral Sherman, then at Memphis, in an effort to capture Vicksburg. The
movement promised to be successful, but on the 20th of December Gene-
ral Van Dorn succeeded in cutting Grant's line of supplies at Holly-
Springs, and obliged him to retreat. On the same day General Sherman,
with a powerful armament, dropped down the river from Memphis.
Proceeding as far as the Yazoo, he
effected a landing, and on the 29th
of the month made an unsuccessful
attack on the Confederates at Chick-
asaw Bayou. The assault was ex-
ceedingly disastrous to the Federals,
who lost in killed, wounded and pris-
oners more than three thousand men.
The enterprise was at once aban-
doned, and the defeated army re-
turned to the fleet of gunboats in
the Mississippi.
The closing conflict of this
year's operations in the West was
tlie great battle of Murfreesborough.
After his successful defence of Cor-
inth General Rosecrans was trans-
ferred to the command of the Army
of the Cumberland. Late in the fall
he made his headquarters at Nash-
ville, and there collected a powerful
army. Meanwhile, General Bragg,
on his retirement from Kentucky,
had thrown his forces into Murfreesborough. Thus the two generals
found themselves face to face, and but thirty miles apart. Late in
December Bosecrans moved forward to attack his imtagonist, and on the
evening of the 30th came upon the Confederates strongly posted on
Stone's River, a short distance north-west of jMurfreesborough. During
the night preparations were made on both sides for the impending
battle. The plan of attack adopted by the Federal commander contem-
plated the massing of his forces on the left in such numbers as to crush
the Confederate right M'ing under Breckinridge before assistance could
be brought from the west side of the river. Bragg's plan of battle was
the exact counterpart of that adopted by Rosecrans. Before daylight
the Confederates were heavily massed under Hardee or^ the left; and
in the early morning the battle began by a furious a.id unexpected
BATTLE OF MURFREESBOROUGH, DEC. 31ST, 1862.
CAMPAIGN OF '62.
501
charge on McCook who commanded the right wing of the Federals.
McCook's outcry for help was at first unheeded by Rosecrans, who did
not realize the real nature of the Confederate onset. After a terrible
struggle which lasted until noonday the Union right was shattered to
fragments and driven from the field. The brunt of the battle now fell
upon General Thomas, who commanded the
Federal right center; and he, too, after des-
perate fighting, was obliged to fall back to
a new position. Here, however, he rallied
his forces and held his ground until Gen-
eral Rosecrans readjusted his whole line of
battle. While this work was going on, the
Confederates were barely prevented from a
complete and overwhelming triumph by the
almost unparalleled heroism of the division
of General AVilliam B. Hazen. With only
thirteen hundred men he stayed the oncom-
ing tide of victorious assailants until the
Federal lines were completely restored. At
nightfldl more than seven thousand Union
soldiers were missing from the ranks.
But General Rosecrans, though de-
feated, was by no means disposed to abandon
the contest. During the night after the bat-
tle, a council of war was held and complete preparations were made for
renewing the struggle on the morrov/. On New Year's morning Gen-
eral Bragg found his antagonist strongly posted, with shortened lines,
and manifest disposition for battle. The Confederate commander
grew cautious; and the day was spent in indecisive skirmishing and
artillery firing at long range. Early on the morning of the 2d, the
conflict broke out afresh on the east side of Stone's River, and for
some hours there was terrific cannonading in that quarter. At three
o'clock in the afternoon the Confederates were massed against the
Union left, and the Nationals were driven across the river by the
shock. But at this juncture the Federal artillery, advantageously
posted on the hills west of the stream, opened a murderous fire
on the assailing columns. At the same time, the discomfited
Federals, rallying to the charge, turned upon their pursuers and
in one tremendous onset drove them from the field with the slaugh-
ter of thousands. General Bragg had lost the prize. During the
night he withdrew his broken and exhausted columns through
BATTLE OF MURFREESBOROUGH, JAN.
2d, 1803.
502 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Murfreesborough and retreated in the direction of Tullahoma. The
Union loss in the two battles was a thousand five hundred and thirty-
three killed, seven thousand two hundred and forty-five wounded, and
nearly three thousand prisoners; that of the Confederates amounted
in killed, wounded, and prisoners to between ten and eleven thou-
sand men.
In Virginia the campaigns of 1862 were even more grand and
destructive than those in the West. The first stirring scenes of the
year were enacted in the Shenandoah Valley. Desiring to occupy
this important district, the Federal government sent forward a strong
division under General Banks, who pressed his way southward, and in
the last days of March occupied the town of Harrisonburg. In order
to counteract this movement, the gallant Stonewall Jackson was sent
with a force of twenty thousand men to pass the Blue Ridge and cut
off Banks's retreat. At Front Royal, on the Shenandoah, just before
the gap in the Mountains, the Confederates fell upon a body of
Federals, routed them, captured their guns and all the military stores
in the town. Banks succeeded, however, in passing with his main
division to Strasburg. There he learned of the disaster at Front
Royal, and immediately began his retreat down the valley. Jackson
pursued him hotly, and it was only by the utmost exertions that the
Federals gained the northern bank of the Potomac.
The Confederate leader, though completely victorious, now found
himself in great peril. For General Fremont, at the head of a strong
force of fresh troops, had been sent into the valley to intercept the re-
treat of the Confederates. It was now Jackson's time to save his
army. With the utmost celerity he sped up the valley, and succeeded
in reaching Cross Keys before Fremont could attack him. Even
then the battle was so little decisive that Jackson pressed on to Port
Republic, attacked the division of General Shields, defeated it, and
then retired from the scene of his brilliant campaign to join in the
defense of Richmond.
On the 10th of March the grand army of the Potomac, num-
bering nearly two hundred thousand men, under command of General
McClellan, set out from the camps about Washington to capture the
Confederate capital. The advance proceeded as far as Manassas Junc-
tion, the Confederates falling back and forming a new line of defences
on the Rap])ahannock. At this stage of the campaign McClellan,
changing his plan, embarked a hundred and twenty thousand of his
men for Fortress Monroe, intending from that point to march up the
peninsula between the James and the York. By the 4th of April the
CAMPAIGNS OF '62.
503
transfer of troops was completed, and the Union army left Fortress
Monroe for Yorktown. This place was garrisoned by ten thousand
Confederates under General Magruder; and yet with so small a force
McClellan's advance was delayed for a whole month. When at last,
on the 4th of May, Yorktown was taken by siege, the Federal army
pressed forward to Williamsburg,
where the Confederates made a
stand, but were defeated with se-
vere losses. Four days afterward,
in an engagement at West Point,
at the confluence of the Matta-
pony and Pamunkey, the Confed-
erates were again overpowered and
driven back. The way to Rich-
mond was now open as far as the
Chickahominy, ten miles north
of the city. The Union army
reached that stream without fur-
ther resistance, and crossed at
Bottom's Bridge.
Meanwhile, General Wool,
the commandant of Fortress Mon-
roe, had not been idle. On the
10th of May he led an expedition
against Norfolk and captured the scene of ca^ipaign in Virginia, maeyland
n ,-, /-^ n 1 • -^^ND PENNSYLVANIA, 1862.
town ; lor the Coniederate garri-
son had been withdrawn to aid in the defence of Richmond. On the
next day the celebrated iron-clad Virginia was blown up to save her
from capture by the Federals. The James River was thus opened for
the ingress of national transports laden with supplies for the Army
•of the Potomac. That army, now advanced toward Richmond, and
when but seven miles from the city was attacked on the 31st of May by
the Confederates at a place called Fair Oaks or Seven Pines. Here
for a part of two days the battle raged with great fury. At last the
Confederates were driven back; but McClellan's victory was by no
means decisive. The Confederate loss was largest, amounting to
nearly eight thousand in killed and wounded; that of the Feder-
als was more than five thousand. Among the severely wounded was
General Joseph E. Johnston, the commander-in-chief of the Con-
federates. .Two days after the battle his place was filled by the
appointment of General Robert E. Lee, a man of military genius.
504
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
On
an-
en-
who, until its final downfall, remained the chief stay of the Confed-
eracy.
In the lull that followed the battle of Fair Oaks, McClellan
formed the design of changing his base of supplies from the White
House, on the Pamunkey, to some suitable point on the James. The
movement was one
of the utmost haz-
ard, and before it
was fairly begun
General Lee, on
the 25th of June,
swooped down on
the right wing of
the Union army at
Oak Grove, and a
hard - fought battle
ensued without de-
cisive results,
the next day
other dreadful
gagement occurred
a t Mechanicsville,
and this time the
Federals won the
field. But on the
following morning
Lee renewed the
struggle at Gaines's Mill, and came out victorious. On the 28th there
was but little fighting. On the 29th McClellan's retreating army was
twice attacked — in the morning at Savage's Station and in the afternoon
in the White Oak Swamp — but the divisions defending the rearguard
kept the Confederates at bay. On the 30th was fought the desperate
but indecisive battle of Glendale or Frazier's Farm. On that night
the Federal army reached Malvern Hill, on the north bank of the
James, twelve miles below Richmond. Although this position was
protected by the Federal gunboats in the river. General Lee deter-
mined to carry the place by storm. Accordingly, on the morning of
the 1st of July the whole Confederate army rushed forward to the as-
sault. All day long the furious struggle for the possession of the high
grounds continued. Not until nine o'clock at night did Lee's shat-
tered columns fall back exhausted. For seven days the terrific roar
GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE.
CAMPAIGNS OF '62.
505.
VICIKITY OF RICHMOND, 18G2.
of battle had been heard almost without cessation. No such dreadful
scenes had ever before been enacted on the American continent.
Although victorious on Malvern Hill, General McClellan, instead
of advancing at once on Richmond, chose a less hazardous movement,
and on the 2d of July retired with his army to Harrison's Landing,,
a few miles down the river. The
great campaign was really at an
end. The Federal army had lost
more than fifteen thousand men,
and the capture of Richmond, the
great object for which the expedi-
tion had been undertaken, seemed
further off than ever. The losses
of the Confederates had been heav-
ier than those of the Union army,
but all the moral eifect of a great
victory remained with the exultant
South.
General Lee, perceiving that
Richmond was no longer endan-
gered, immediately formed the de-
sign of invading Maryland and capturing the Federal capital. The
Union troops between Richmond and Washington, numbering in the
aggregate about fifty thousand, were under command of General John
Pope. They were scattered in detachments from Fredericksburg to
Winchester and Harper's Ferry. Lee moved northward about the
middle of August, and on the 20th of the month Pope, concentrating
his forces as rapidly as possible, put the Rappahannock between his
army and the advancing Confederates. Meanwhile General Banks,
while attempting to form a junction with Pope, was attacked by Stone-
wall Jackson at Cedar Mountain, where nothing but desperate fighting
saved the Federals from complete rout.
No sooner had Pope gotten his forces well in hand than Jackson
shot by with his division on a flank movement, reached Manassas
Junction, and made large captures of men and stores. Pope with great
audacity threw his army between the two divisions of the Confederates,
hoping to crush Jackson before Lee could come to the rescue. On
August 28th and 29th there was terrible but undecisive fighting at
Manassas Junction, the old Bull Run battle-ground, and Centreville.
At one time it seemed that Lee's army would be completely defeated;
but Pope's reinforcements were purposely delayed by General Porter,,
:506 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
aud on the 31st of the month the Confederates bore down on the
Union army at Chantilly, fought all day, and won a victory. Gen-
erals Stevens and Kearney were among the thousands of brave men
who fell in this battle. On that night Pope withdrew his shattered
columns as rapidly as possible, and found safety within the defences
of Washington. His wish to be relieved of his command was imme-
diately complied with; his forces, known as the Army of Virginia,
were consolidated with the Army of the Potomac, which had now
TDeen recalled from the peninsula below Richmond; and General Mc-
■Clellan was placed in supreme command of all the divisions about
'Washington.
General Le© prosecuted his invasion of Maryland. Passing up
the right bank of the Potomac, he crossed to Point of Rocks, and on
the 6th of September captured Frederick. On the 10th Hagerstown
was taken, and on the 15th a division of the Confederate army, led
by Stonewall Jackson came upon Harper's Ferry and frightened Colo-
nel Miles into surrender by which the garrison, nearly twelve thou-
sand strong, became prisoners of war. On the previous day there was
a hard-fought engagement at South Mountain, in which the Federals,
led by Hatch and Doubleday, were victorious. McClellan's whole
army was now in the immediate rear of Lee, who, on the night of the
14th, fell back to Antietam Creek, and took a strong position in the
vicinity of Sharpsburg. On the morning of the 15th there was some
^harp but desultory fighting between the Union and Confederate cav-
alry. During the afternoon the Federal advance, coming in on the
Sharpsburg road from Keedysville, received the opening salutes of the
Confederate guns on the Antietam. But nightfall came without a se-
rious conflict. On the following morning there was great activity of
preparation in both armies. Later in the day the corps of General
Hooker, who commanded on the Federal right, was thrown across the
stream which separated the combatants and brought into a favorable
position for action. In this quarter of the field the Confederate left
under General Hood was assaulted and driven back a half mile in the
direction of Sharpsburg. The rest of the day was spent in an irregu-
lar cannonade. During the night General Mansfield's corps crossed
the Antietam on the north bridge and joined Hooker.
On the morning of the 17th both commanders had their armies
well into position, the Federals being strongest in numbers and the
Confederates having the advantage of an unfordable stream in their
front. It was of the first importance that General McClellan should
gain and hold the four stone bridges by which only his forces could
CAMPAIGNS OF '62.
507
be thrown to the other side. General Burnside, who was ordered to
take the lower bridge, cross over, and attack the division of A. P.
Hill, encountered unexpected delays and was greatly retarded in his
movements. On the right. Hooker renewed the battle at sunrise, and
until late in the afternoon the conflict raged with almost unabated
fury. Here fell the
veteran General Mans-
field and thousands of
his comrades. Mean-
while, Burnside had
forced the lower cross-
ing and carried the
battle far up in the di-
rection of Sharpsburg.
But the Confederates
beins: reinforced from
other parts of the field
made a rally, and the
Federals were driven
back nearly to the An-
tietam. It was only by
terrible fighting that
General Burnside suc-
ceeded in holding his
position on the west
bank of the stream.
But on the approach
of darkness the great-
er part of the Union
army had gained a safe
lodgment between the
creek and Sharpsburg.
Nevertheless, the Confederate forces occupied nearly the same ground
as in the morning ; and it seemed that the final struggle was reserved
for the morrow. On that day, however, General McClellan acted on
the defensive. Two strong divisions of reinforcements, under Generals
Humphreys and Couch, arrived, and it was resolved to renew the at-
tack on the following morning. But in the mean time. General Lee
had taken advantage of the delay, withdrawn his shattered legions from
their position, and recrossed the Potomac into Virginia. The great
<sonflict which had cost each army more than ten thousand men had
THE BATTLE OF ANTIETAM, SEITEMBER 17, '62.
508
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ended in a drawn battle in which there is little to be praised except
the heroism of the soldiery. To the Confederates, however, the result
was almost as disastrous as defeat. The promised uprising of the
people of Maryland in behalf of the Confederate cause did not occur
and General Lee was obliged to give up a fruitless and hopeless in-
vasion which, in the short space of a month, had cost him nearly
thirty thousand men. On the
other side, the expectations
which had been inspired by
the movements and despatch-
es of the Union commander
previous to the battle had been
sorely disappointed.
On the 26th of October,
General McClellan, following
the retreating Confederates,
again entered Virginia, and
reached Rectortown. It was
the purpose of the Federal
government that the Army
of the Potomac should, be-
fore the approach of winter,
be thrown forward in a sec-
ond attempt against Rich-
mond. The Union c<>mmand-
er still preferred to advance
by the route which he had
taken the previous spring, making his base of supplies at West Point
on the Pamunkey. But this plan was open to the objection that Wash-
ington city would thereby be again uncovered and exposed to a coun-
ter movement on the part of the Confederates. Yielding to the pro-
test of the President and his cabinet, McClellan altered his plans and
chose Alexandria on the Potomac as his base of operations. From
this point it was proposed to advance on the Confederate capital by
way of the Orange Railroad through Culpepper to Gordonsville, and
thence by the Virginia Central to its junction with the line reaching
from Fredericksburg to Richmond. The month of October was
wasted with delays, and November was well begun before the Federal
general with his army of a hundred and twenty thousand men, an-
nounced himself ready for the forward movement. On the 7th of
THE PROPOSED POUTES FROM WASHINGTON TO RICH-
MOND, 1862.
CAMPAIGNS OF '62. 509
the month, just as the Union commander was about to begin the cam-
paign, he was superseded and his command transferred to Genera]
Burnside. Right or wrong, the President at last reached the decision
that General McClellan was a man over-cautious and slow — too pru-
dent and too much absorbed in preliminaries to lead the armies of
the Republic to victory.
General Burnside immediately changed the plan of the proposed
campaign. It was decided to form a new base of supplies at the
mouth of Acquia Creek, fifty-five miles below Washington and from
that point to force a way by battle southward through Fredericks-
burg. But again movements were much delayed, and that, too, when
everything depended on celerity. The pontoons, which were neces-
sary for the crossing of the Rappahannock, were not forthcoming,
and a fortnight was lost in preparations. General Lee found abun-
dant time to gather his legions and occupy the heights in the vicinity
of Fredericksburg. It was not a part of his plan to dispute the pas-
sage of the river but to allow the Federals to cross over and then
beat them back from his entrenchments. On the 11th of December
the Union army was brought into position on the east bank of the
Rappahannock. The divisions lay from the village of Falmouth to
a point opposite the mouth of the Massaponax, about three miles be-
low. In front of the corps of General Franklin, who commanded
the Federal left wing, the pontoons were successfully laid and the
crossing of the river was effected without serious opposition. But
opposite Fredericksburg, where the divisions of Generals Sumner and
Hooker, who held the Union center and right, were to cross, the work
of laying the bridges was hindered by the Confederate sharpshooters
lying concealed in the town. General Burnside ordered the Federal
guns to be turned in that direction, and in a short time Fredericks-
burg was battered and burned into ruins. Some Union regiments
were next ferried over in boats, and the Confederate picket lines were
driven back to the heights. The bridges were completed, and by
nightfall of the 12th the army had been transferred to the western
side of the river.
On the morning of the 13th the battle began on the left where
Franklin's division encountered the corps of Stonewall Jackson. A
gallant charge was made by General Meade and a gap was made in
the Confederate lines; but no reinforcements were sent forward; the
Confederates rallied, and the Federals were driven back with a loss
•of three thousand seven hundred men. Jackson's loss was almost as
510 ElSiORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
great, and in this part of the field neither side might claim a decisive
victory. Not so in the center and on the right. Here a portion of
General Sumner's men were ordered forward against the Confederates
securely and impregnably posted on Marye's Hill. They were mowed
down by thousands and hurled back in disdain, while the defenders
of the heights hardly lost a man. Time and again the assault wag
recklessly renewed. A part of Hooker's gallant troops, led by Gen-
eral Humphreys, came forward ; charged with unloaded guns ; and in
fifteen minutes one-half of the four thousand brave fellows went down
in death. Night came and ended the useless carnage. General Burn-
side would have renewed the battle ; but his division commanders
finally dissuaded him and on the night of the 15th the Federal army
was silently withdrawn across the Rappahannock. The Union losses
in this terrible conflict amounted to a thousand five hundred killed,
nine thousand one hundred wounded, and sixteen hundred and fifty
prisoners and missing. The Confederates lost in killed five hundred
and ninety-five, four thousand and sixty-one wounded, and six hun-
dred and fifty-three missing and prisoners. Of all the important
movements of the war only that of Fredericksburg was undertaken
with no probability of success. Under the plan of the battle — if
plan it might be called, nothing could be reasonably expected but
repulse, rout, and ruin. Thus in gloom and disaster to the Federal
cause ended the great campaign of 1862.
CHAPTER LXV.
THE WORK OF '63.
npIIE war had now grown to enormous proportions. The Confederate
-■- States were draining every resource of men and means in order to
support their armies. The superior energies of the North, though by no
means exhausted, were greatly taxed. In the previous year, on the day
after the battle of Malvern Hill, President Lincoln had issued a call for
three hundred thousand additional troops. During the exciting days of
Pope's retreat from the Rappahannock he sent forth another call for thre^
THE WOBK OF '63. 5 IX,
hundred thousand, and to that was added a requisition for a draft of three
hundred thousand more. Most of these enormous demands were promptly
met, and it became evident that in respect to resources the Federal gov-
ernment was vastly superior to the Confederacy.
On the 1st day of January, 1863, the President issued one of the
most unportant documents of modern times: The Emancipation
Peoclamation.* The war had been begun with no well-defined inten-
tion on the part of the government to free the slaves of the South. But
the President and the Republican party looked with disfavor on the in-
stitution of slavery; during the progress of the war the sentiment of
abolition had grown with great rapidity in the North ; and when at last
it became a military necessity to strike a blow at the labor-system of the
Southern States, the step was taken with but little hesitancy or oppo-
sition. Thus, after an existence of two hundred and forty-four years, the
institution of African slavery in the United States was swept away.
The military movements of the new year began on the Mississippi
After his defeat at Chickasaw Bayou, General Sherman laid a plan for
the capture of Arkansas Post, on the Arkansas River. In the first days
of January an expedition set out for that purpose, the land-forces being
commanded by General McClernand, and the flotilla by Admiral Porter.
Entering the Arkansas, the Union forces reached their destination on the
10th of the month, fought a hard battle with the Confederates, gained a
victory, and on the next day received the surrender of the post with
nearly five thousand prisoners. After this success the expedition returned
to the vicinity of Vicksburg, in order to co-operate with General Grant
in a second effort to capture that stronghold of the Confederacy.
Again the Union forces were collected at Memphis, and embarked
on the Mississippi. A landing was efiected at the Yazoo ; but the cap-
ture of the city from that direction was decided to be impracticable. The
first three months of the year were spent by General Grant in beating
about the bayous, swamps and hills around Vicksburg, in the hope of
getting a position in the rear of the town. A canal was cut across a
bend in the river with a view to turning the channel of the Mississippi
and opening a passage for the gunboats. But a flood in the river washed
the works away, and the enterprise ended in failure. Then another
canal was begun, only to be abandoned. Finally, in the first days of
April, it was determined at all hazards to run the fleet past the Vicksburg
batteries. Accordingly, on the night of the 16th, the boats were made
ready and silently dropped down the river. All of a sudden the guns
burst forth with terrible discharges of shot and shell, pelting the passing
* See Appendix H.
512
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
steamers ; but they went by with comparatively little damage, and found
a safe position below the city.
Elated with the successful pas-
sage of his fleet, General Grant
now marched his land-forces down
the right bank of the Mississippi
and formed a junction with the
squadron. On the 30th of April
he crossed the river at Bruinsburg,
and on the following day fought
and defeated the Confederates at
Port Gibson. The evacuation of
Grand Gulf, at the mouth of the
Big Black River, followed imme-
diately afterward. The Union army
Vicksburg. On the morning of
VICKSBURG AND VICINITY, 1863.
now swept around to the rear of
the 12th a strong Confederate force was encountered at Raymond, and
after a severe engagement was repulsed. Pressing on toward Jackson,
the capital of Mississippi, General Grant's right wing, under Sherman and
McPherson, met the advance of General Johnston's division coming to
reinforce the garrison of Vicksburg. Here, on the 14th of the month,
a decisive battle was fought ; the Confederates were beaten, and the city
of Jackson captured. The communications of Vicksburg were now cut
oif, and General Pemberton was obliged to repel the Federals or suffer a
siege. Sallying forth with the greater part of liis forces, he met the Union
army on the 16th at Champion Hills, on Baker's Creek. In the battle
that followed, as well as in a conflict at tlie Black River Bridge on the
17th, Grant was again victorious, and Pemberton retired with his dis-
heartened troops within the defences of Vicksburg.
The investment of the city was rapidly completed. Believing that
the Confederate works could be carried by storm, General Grant, on the
19th of May, ordered an assault, which resulted in a repulse with terrible
losses. Three days afterward the attempt was renewed, but the assailants
were again hurled back with a still greater destruction of life. The
Union loss in these two unsuccessful assaults amounted to nearly three
thousand men. Finding that Vicksburg could not be taken by storm,
General Grant began a regular siege, and pressed it with ever-increasing
severity. Admiral Porter got his gunboats into position and bombarded
the unfortunate town incessantly. Reinforcements swelled the Union
ranks. On the other hand, the garrison of the city was in a starving con-
dition. Still, Pemberton held out for more than a month ; and it was
THE WORK OF '63. 513
not until the 4th of July that he was driven to surrender. By the act
of capitulation the defenders of Vicksburg, numbering nearly thirty
thousand, became prisoners of war. Thousands of small-arms, hundreds
of cannon, vast quantities of ammunition and warlike stores were the
fruits of this great Union victory, by which the national government
gained more and the Confederacy lost more than in any previous struggle
of the war.
Meanwhile, General Banks, who had superseded General Butler in
command of the department of the gulf, had been conducting a vigor-
ous campaign on the Lower Mississippi. Early in January, from his
headquarters at Baton Rouge, he advanced into Louisiana, reached Brash-
ear City, and shortly afterward gained a victory over a Confederate force
at a place called Bayou Teche. Returning to the Mississippi, he moved
northward to Port Hudson, invested the place and began a siege. The
beleaguered garrison, under General Gardner, made a brave defence ; and
it was not until the 8th of July, when the news of the fall of Vicksburg
was borne to Port Hudson, that the commandant, with his force of more
than six thousand men, was obliged to capitulate. By this important
surrender the control of the Mississippi throughout its whole length M'as
recovered by the National government.
During the progress of the war cavalry raids became more and more
frequent. Of this nature was Stonewall Jackson's campaign down the
Shenandoah valley in the summer of 1862. Later in the same year, just
after the battle of Antietam, the Confederate General Stuart, with a troop
of eighteen hundred cavalrymen, made a dash into Pennsylvania, reached
Chambersburg, captured the town, made a complete circuit of the Army
of the Potomac, and returned in safety to Virginia. Just before the in-
vestment of Vicksburg, Colonel Benjamin Grierson, of the Sixth Illinois
Cavalry, struck out with his command from La Grange, Tennessee, en-
tered Mississippi, traversed the State to the east of Jackson, cut the rail-
roads, destroyed property, and after a rapid course of more than eight
hundred miles gained the river at Baton Rouge. By these raids the
border country of both sections was kept in perpetual agitation and alarm.
For a while after the battle of Murfreesborough Rosecrans re-
mained inactive. Late in the spring Colonel Streight's command went
on a raid into Georgia, met the division of the Confederate general
Forrest, was surrounded and captured. In the latter part of June, Rose-
crans by a series of flank movements succeeded in crowding General Bragg
out of Tennessee into Georgia. The union general followed his antago-
nist and took post at Chattanooga, on the left bank of the Tennessee.
During the summer months General Bragg was heavily reinforced by
33
514
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Johnston from Mississippi, and Longstreet from Virginia. On the 19th
of September he turned upon the Federal army at Chickamauga Creek,
in the north-west angle of Georgia. During this day a hard battle
was fought, but night fell on the scene with the victory undecided.
During the night the Confederates were reinforced by the arrival of
General Longstreet, who was stationed with his division on the left
wing of Bragg's army. The
right was given to General
Polk, while the center was
held by Ewell and Johnston.
The Federal left wing was
commanded by General
Thomas, the center by Crit-
tenden, and the right by Mc-
Cook. The plan of the Con-
federate commander was to
crush the Union line, force
his way through a gap in
Missionary Eidge, capture
Rossville and Chattanooga,
and annihilate Rosecrans's
army. The battle began at
half past eight o'clock on
the morning of the 20th,
the Confederates moving on
in powerful masses, and
the Federals holding their
ground with unflinching courage. After the conflict had continued
for some hours, the national battle-line was opened by General AYood,
acting under mistaken orders. The Confederate general, seeing his
advantage, thrust forward a heavy column into the gap, cut the Union
army in two, and drove the shattered right wing in utter rout from
the field. General Thomas, with a desperate firmness hardly equaled
in the annals of war, held the left until nightfall, and then, under
cover of darkness, withdrew into Chattanooga, where the defeated
army of Rosecrans had already found shelter. The Union losses in
this dreadful battle amounted in killed, wounded and missing to
nearly nineteen thousand, and the Confederate loss was even more
appalling.
General Bragg at once pressed forward to besiege Chattanooga.
The Federal lines of communication were cut oif, and for a while the
army of Rosecrans was in danger of being annihilated. But General
BATTLK OF CHICKAMAUGA, SEPT. 19, 20, 1863.
THE WORK OF 63.
515
Hooker arrived with two corps from the Army of the Potomac, opened
the Tennessee River, and brought relief to the besieged. At the same
time General Grant, being promoted to the chief command of the
Western armies, assumed the direction of aifairs at Chattanooga. Gen-
eral Sherman also arrived with his division, so strengthening the Army
of the Cumber-
land that offen-
sive operations
were at once
renewed. The
left Av i n g of
the Confederate
army now rest-
ed on Look-
out Mountain,
and the right
o n Missionary
A po-
sition seemingly
more impregna-
ble could hard-
ly be conceived
of. General
Bragg was not
only confident
of his ability to
hold his lines
against any ad-
E-idge
LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN AND MISSIONARY EIDGE, NOV. 23-25, 1863.
vance of the Federals but even contemplated the storming of Chatta-
nooga. On the 20th of November he gave notice to General Grant to
remove all non-combatants as the town was about to be bombarded;
but no attention was paid to the despatch. On the 23d General Hooker
threw his corps across the river below Chattanooga and gained a foot-
ing at the mouth of Lookout Creek facing the mountain. From this
position the assault was made on the following morning. Hooker was
supported by the divisions of Generals Geary and Osterhaiis, and the
remainder of the Union army was kept in a state of activity in order
to prevent the reinforcement of Lookout from Missionary Ridge. A
dense fog hung like a hood over the mountain, efiectually concealing
the movements of the Federals. The charge began between eight and
nine o'clock, and in the space of two hours the ranges of Confederate
rifle-pits among the foot-hills had been successfully carried. It had
516 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
been General Hooker's purpose to pause when this work should be
accomplished, but the enthusiasm of his army rose to such a pitch as
to suggest the still greater achievement of carrying the whole Confed-
erate position. Taking advantage of the fog and the spirit of his
soldiers Hooker again gave the command to charge ; and up the almost
inaccessible slopes of the mountain the troops sprang forward with re-
sistless energy. It was such a scene of dauntless heroism as has rarely
been portrayed in the records of battle. The charging columns, strug-
gling against the obstacles of nature and facing the murderous fire of
the Confederate guns, could not be checked. The Union flag was
carried to the top; and before two o'clock in the afternoon Lookout
Mountain, with its cloud-capped summit overlooking the town and
river, was swarming with Federal soldiers. The routed Confederates
retreated down the eastern slope and across the intervening hills and
valleys in the direction of Missionary Ridge.
The second great conflict was reserved for the morrow. During
the night of the 24th General Bragg concentrated his forces and made
preparations to defend his position to the last. On the following
morning Hooker's victorious troops poured down from Lookout,
crossed the Chattanooga, and renewed the battle at the southwestern
extremity of Missionary Ridge. General Sherman had already built
pontoon bridges over the Tennessee and Chickamauga, thrown his
corps across those streams, and gained a lodgment on tlic northeastern
declivity of the Ridge. General Thomas, commanding the Union
center, lay with his impatient soldiers, on the southern and eastern
slopes of Orchard Knob, awaiting the result of Sherman's and Hooker's
onsets. At two o'clock in the afternoon orders were given by Gen-
eral Grant for an assault along the whole line. And the command
was instantly obeyed. The thrilling scene of Lookout Mountain was
again enacted. The Federal soldiers charged to the summit of Mis-
sionary Ridge and the Confederates were driven into a disastrous rout.
During the night General Bragg withdrew his shattered columns and
retreated in the direction of Ringgold, Georgia. The Federal losses
in the two great battles amounted to seven hundred and fifty-seven
killed, four thousand five hundred and twenty-nine wounded, and three
hundred and thirty missing; the loss of the Confederates in killed,
wounded and prisoners reached considerably beyond ten thousand.
The results of the conflict were so decisive as to put an end to the
war in Tennessee until it was renewed by Hood at Franklin and
Nashville in the winter of 1864.
In the mean time, Gen*>ral Burnside was making an effort to hold
Ea.st Tennessee. On the 1st of September he arrived with his command
THE WORK OF '63. 517
at Knoxville, where he was received by the people with lively satisfac-
tion. After the battle of Chickamauga, General Longstreet was sent into
East Tennessee to counteract the movements of the Unionists. On his
march to Knoxville he overtook and captured several small detachments
of Federal troops, then invested the town and began a siege. On the
29th of November the Confederates made an attempt to carry Knoxville
by storm, but were repulsed with heavy losses. After the retreat of Bragg
from Chattanooga, General Sherman marched to the relief of Burnside;
but before he could reach Knoxville, Longstreet raised the siege and re-
treated into Virginia.
In the early part of 1863 the Confederates, led by Generals Mar-
maduke and Price, resumed activity in Arkansas and Southern Missouri.
On the 8th of January they made an attack on Springfield, but were re-
pulsed with considerable losses. Three days afterward, at the town of
Hartsville, a battle was fought with a similar result. On the 26th of
April, General Marmaduke attacked the post at Cape Girardeau, on the
Mississippi, but the garrison succeeded in driving the Confederates away.
On the day of the surrender of Vicksburg the Confederate general
Holmes, with a force of nearly eight thousand men, made an attack
on Helena, Arkansas, but was repulsed with a loss of one-fifth of his
men. On the 13th of August the town of Lawrence, Kansas, was
sacked and burned, and a hundred and forty persons killed by a band
of desperate fellows led by a chieftain called Quantrell. On the 10th
of September the Federal general Steele reached Little Rock, the
capital of Arkansas, captured the city and restored the national authority
in the State.
To the summer of this year belongs the story of General John
Morgan's great raid through Kentucky into Indiana and Ohio. His
starting-point was Sparta, Tennessee; the number of his forces three
thousand. Pushing northward through Kentucky, he gathered strength,
reached the Ohio at Brandenburg, crossed into Indiana, and began his
march to the north and east. He was resisted at Corydon and other
points by bodies of home-guards, and hotly pursued by a force under
General Hobson. Morgan crossed into Ohio at Harrison, made a circuit
to the north of Cincinnati, and attempted to recross the river. But the
Ohio was now guarded by gunboats, and the raiders were driven back.
With numbers constantly diminishing the Confederate leader pressed on,
fighting and flying, until he came near the town of New Lisbon, where
he was surrounded and captured by the brigade of General Shackelford.
For nearly four months Morgan was held as a prisoner; then mak-
ing his escape, he fled to Kentucky, and finally reached Richmond.
The year 1863 was marked by some movements of importance on
518 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
tlie sea-coast. On the 1st of January General Marmaduke, by a brilliant
exploit, caj)tured Galveston, Texas. By this means the Confederates se-
cured a port of entry, of which they were greatly in need in the South-
west. On the 7th of April Admiral Dupont, with a powerful fleet of iron-
clads, made an attempt to capture Charleston, but the squadron was driven
back much damaged. In the last days of June the siege of the city was
begun anew by a strong land-force, under command of General Q. A.
Gillmore, assisted by the fleet under Admiral Dahlgren. The Federal
army first effected a lodgment on Folly Island, and soon afterward on
the south end of Morris Island, where batteries were planted bearing upon
Fort Sumter in the channel and Fort Wagner and Battery Gregg at the
northern extremity of the island. After the bombardment had continued
for some time, General Gillmore, on the 18th of July, made an attempt
to carry Fort Wagner by assault, but was repulsed with a loss of more
than fifteen hundred men. The siege then progressed until the night of
the 6 th of September, when the Confederates evacuated the fort and Bat-
tery Gregg, and retired to Charleston. Gillmore thus obtained a position
within four miles of the city, and brought his guns to bear on the wharves
and buildings of the lower town. Meanwhile, the walls of Fort Sumter
on the side next to Morris Island had been pounded into powder by the
land-batteries and guns of the monitors. The harbor and city, however,
still remained under control of the Confederates, the only gain of the
Federals being the establishment of a blockade so complete as to seal up
the port of Charleston.
During the spring and summer of 1863 the Army of the Potomac
was engaged in several desperate conflicts. After his fatal repulse at
Fredericksburg General Burnside was superseded by General Joseph
Hooker, who, in the latter part of April, moved forward with his army in
full force, crossed the Rappahannock and the Bapidan, and reached
Chancellorsville. Here, on the evening of the 2d of May, he was at-
tacked by the veteran Army of Northern Virginia, led by Lee and Jack-
son. The latter general, with extraordinary daring, put himself at the
head of a division of twenty-five thousand men, filed off from the battle-
field, outflanked the Union army, burst like a thunder-cloud upon the
right wing, and swept everything to destruction. But it was the last of
Stonewall's battles. As night came on, with ruin impending over the
Federal army, the brave Confederate leader, riding through the gather-
ing darkness, received a volley from his own lines, and fell mortally
wounded. He lingered a week, and died at Guinea Station, leaving a
gap in the Confederate ranks Avhich no other man could fill.
On the morning of the 3d the battle was furiously renewed. Gen-
eral Sedgwick, attempting to reinforce Hooker from Fredericksburg, was
THE WORK OF '63.
519
•defeated and driven across the Rappahannock. The main army was
crowded between Chancellorsville and the river, w^here it remained in the
utmost peril until the evening of the 5th, when General Hooker succeeded
in withdrawing his forces to the northern bank. The Union losses in
these terrible battles amounted in killed, wounded and prisoners to about
seventeen thousand ; that of the Confederates was less by five thousand.
Taken altogether, the campaign was the most disastrous of any in which
tne Federal army had yet been engaged.
The defeat of General Hooker was to some extent mitigated by the
successful cavalry raid of General Stoneman. On the 29th of April he
crossed the Rappahannock with a body of ten thousand men, tore up the
Virginia Central Railroad, dashed on to the Chickahominy, cut General
Lee's communications,
swept around within
Si few miles of Rich-
mond, and on the 8th
of May recrossed the
Rappahannock in
safety. At the same
time. General Peck,
the Federal command-
ant of Suifolk, on the
JS^ansemond, w^as suc-
ces^ully resisting a
siege conducted by
General Longstreet.
The Confederates re-
treated from before the
town on the very day
of the Union disaster
at Chancellorsville.
Elated with his
success on the Rappa-
hannock, General Lee
determined to carry
the war into Mary-
land and Pennsylvania.
STONEWALL, JACKSON.*
In the first week of June he moved forward
*The true name of this remarkable man was Thomas Jonathan Jackson. In the be^
ginning of the battle of Bull Run, when the Confederates in one part of the field were
routed and flying, General Bee, pointing to an immovable column of men, cried out,
" Here is Jackson, standing like a stone tvall !" From that day the man at the head of
that column was called Stonewall Jackson.
520
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
with his whole army, crossed the Potomac, and captured Hagerstown..
.On the 22d of June the invaders entered Chambersburg, and then
pressed on through Carlisle to within a few miles of Harrisburg.
The militia of Pennsylvania was called out, and volunteers came
pouring in from other States. General Hooker, at the head of the
Army of the Potomac, pushed forward to strike his antagonist. It
was evident that
a great and deci-
sive battle was at
hand. General
Lee, abandoning
his purpose of
invasion, rapidly
concentrated his
forces near Get-
tysburg, the cap-
ital of Adams
County, Penn-
sylvania. On the
very eve of bat-
tle the command
of the Union ar-
my was transfer-
red from General
Hooker to Gen-
eral George G.
Meade, who has-
tily advanced his
forces through
the hill - country
in the direction
of Gettysburg,
After more than
two years of indecisive warfare it seemed that the fate of the Amer-
ican Republic was to be staked on the issue of a single battle. On
the morning of the 1st of July the Union advance, led by Generals
Reynolds and Buford, while moving westward from Gettysburg, en-
countered the Confederate division of General Hill, coming up on the
road from Hagerstown ; and the struggle began. In the afternoon
strong reinforcements were received and a severe battle was fought
for the possession of Seminary Ridge. In this initial conflict the
BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, JULY 1, !
1SC3.
THE WORK OF '63. 521
Confederates were victorious, driving the Union line from its posi-
tion, through the village, and back to the high grounds southward.
Here at nightfall a stand was made, and a new battle-line was formed
reaching from an eminence called Round Top, where the left wing
rested, around the crest of the ridges to Cemetery Hill, where the
center was posted, and thence to Wolf Hill on Rock Creek. To
this position, well-choseu and strong, the whole Union army, ex-
cept Sedgwick's corps, was hurried forward during the night. Tbe
Confederate forces were all brought into position on Seminary Ridge
and the high grounds to the left of Rock Creek, forming a semi-
circle about five miles long. The cavalry of both armies hung upon
the flanks, doing effective service but hardly participating in the
main conflict of the center.
On the morning of July 2d, the corps of General Longstreet on
the Confederate right moved forward impetuously and attacked the
Union left under Sickles. The struggle in this part of the field was
for the possession of Great and Little Round Top ; and after terrible
fighting, which lasted until six o'clock in the evening, these strong-
positions remained in the hands of the Federals. In the center a
similar conflict, lasting for the greater part of the day, ensued for the
possession of Cemetery Hill. Here, too, notwithstanding the desper-
ate assaults of the Confederates, the integrity of the National line wa^s
preserved till nightfall. On the right the Confederate onset was more
successful, and the Union right under General Slocum was somewhat
shattered. But at ten o'clock at night, when the fighting ceased, it
was found that the position of the two armies had not been materially
changed by a conflict which had left forty thousand dead and wounded
men on the field of battle.
Under cover of the darkness both generals made arrangements
to renew the struggle on the morrow, but when morning came both
were loath to begin. For each felt that this day's action must be de-
cisive. General Meade had some advantage in the fact that Lee, in
in order to continue his invasion, must carry the Union position or
retreat. The whole forenoon of the 3d was spent in preparations.
At midday there was a lull. Then burst forth the fiercest cannonade
ever known on the American continent. Until after two o'clock the
hills were shaken Avith the thunders of more than two hundred heavy
guns. The Confederate artillerymen concentrated their fire on the
Union center at Cemetery Hill which became a scene of indescribable
uproar and death. Then came the crisis. The cannonade ceased.
A Confederate column, nearly three miles long, headed by the Yir-
522 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ginians under General Pickett, made a final and desperate charge on
the Union centre. But the onset was in vain, and the brave men who
made it were mowed down with terrible slaughter. The victory remained
with the national army, and Lee was obliged to turn back with his shat-
tered legions to the Potomac. The entire Confederate loss in this the
greatest battle of the war was nearly thirty thousand ; that of the Fede-
rals in killed, wounded and missing, twenty-three thousand a hundred
and eighty-six. General Lee withdrew his forces into Virginia, and the
Union army resumed its old position on the Potomac and the Rappahan-
nock. Such were the more important military movements of 1863.
During this year the administration of President Lincoln was beset
with many difficulties. The w^ar-debt of the nation was piling up moun-
tains high. The last calls for volunteers had not been fully met. The
anti-war party of the North had grown more bold, and openly denounced
the measures of the government. On the 3d of March the Conscrip-
tion Act was passed by Congress, and two months afterward the Presi-
dent ordered a general draft of three hundred thousand men. All able-
bodied citizens between the ages of twenty and forty-five years were
subject to the requisition. The measure was bitterly denounced by the
opponents of the war, and in many places the draft-officers were forcibly
resisted. On the 13th of July, in the city of New York, a vast mob rose
in arms, demolished the buildings which were occupied by the provost
marshals, burned the colored orphan asylum, attacked the police, and
killed about a hundred people, most of whom were negroes. For three
days the authorities of the city were set at defiance. On the second
day of the reign of terror Governor Seymour arrived and addressed
the mob in a mild-mannered way, promising that the draft should be
suspended, and advising the rioters to disperse ; but they gave little
heed to his mellow admonition, and went on with the w^ork of de-
struction. General Wool, commander of the military district of New
York, then took the matter in hand; but the troops at his disposal
were at first unable to overawe the insurgents. Some volunteer regi-
ments, however, came trooping home from Gettysburg ; the Metropol-
itan police companies were compactly organized ; and the combined
forces soon crushed the insurrection with a strong hand. After the
fall of Vicksburg and the retreat of Lee from Pennsylvania, there
were fewer acts of domestic violence. Nevertheless, the anti-war
spirit in some parts of the North ran so high that on the 19th of
August President Lincoln issued a proclamation suspending the priv-
ileges of the writ of habeas corpus throughout the Union.
As a means of procuring soldiers the draft amounted to nothing ;
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS. 523
Dnly about fifty thousand men were thus directly obtained. But volun-
teering was greatly quickened by the measure, and the employment of
substitutes soon filled the ranks of the army. Such, however, were the
terrible losses by battle and disease and the expiration of enlistments
that in October the President issued another call for three hundred thou-
sand men. At the same time it was provided that any delinquency in
meeting the demand would be supplied by a draft in the following Janu-
ary. By these active measures the columns of the Union army were made
more powerful than ever. In the armies of the South, on the other hand,
there were already symptoms of exhaustion, and the most rigorous con-
scription was necessary to fill the thinned but still courageous ranks ol
the Confederacy. It was on the 20th of June in this year that West Vir-
ginia, separated from the Old Dominion, was organized and admitted as
the thirty-fifth State of the Union.
CHAPTER LXVI.
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS.
AS in the previous year, the military movements of 1864 began in the
West. In the beginning of February General Sherman left Vicks-
burg with the purpose of destroying the railroad connections of Eastern
Mississippi. Marching toward Alabama, he reached Meridian on the
15th of the month. Here, where the railroad from Mobile to Corinth
intersects the line from Vicksburg to Montgomery, the tracks were torn
up for a distance of a hundred and fifty miles. Bridges were burned,
locomotives and cars destroyed, vast quantities of cotton and corn given
to the flames. At Meridian General Sherman expected the arrival of a
strong force of Federal cavalry which had been sent out from Memphis,
under command of General Smith. The latter advanced into Mississippi,
but was met, a hundred miles north of Meridian, by the cavalry of For-
rest, and driven back to Memphis. Disappointed of the expected junc-
tion of his forces. General Sherman retraced his course to Vicksburg.
Forrest continued his raid northward, entered Tennessee, and on the 24th
of March captured Union City. Pressing on, he reached Paducah, Ken-
tucky, made an assault on Fort Anderson, in the suburbs of the town, but
was repulsed with a loss of three hundred men. Turning back into Ten-
nessee, he came upon Fort Pillow, on the Mississippi, seventy miles
.above Memphis. The place was defended by five hundred and sixty
524 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
soldiers, about half of whom were negroes. Forrest, having gained
the outer defences, demanded a surrender, hut was refused. He
then ordered an assault, and carried the fort by storm.
To the spring of 1864 belongs the story of the Red River Expe-
dition, conducted by General Banks. The object had in view was the
capture of Shreveport, the seat of the Confederate government of Louisi-
ana. A strong land-force was to march up Red River, supported by a
fleet of gunboats, under command of Admiral Porter. The army was
composed of three divisions : the first, from Vicksburg, numbering ten
thousand, commanded by General Smith ; the second, from New Orleans,
led by General Banks in person; the third, from Little Rock, under com-
mand of General Steele. In the beginning of March Smith's division
moved forward to Red River, and was joined by Porter with the fleet.
On the 14th of the same month the advance reached Fort de Russy,
which was taken by assault. The Confederates retreated up the river to
Alexandria, and on the 16th that city was occupied by the Federals.
Three days afterward Natchitoches Avas captured; but here the road
turned from the river, and further co-operation between the gunboats
and the army was impossible. The flotilla proceeded up stream toward
Shreveport, and the land-forces whirled off in a circuit to the left.
On the 8th of April, when the advanced brigades were approach-
ing the town of Mansfield, they were suddenly attacked by the Confede-
rates in full force and advantageously posted. After a short and bloody
engagement, the Federals were completely routed. The victors made a
vigorous pursuit as far as Pleasant Hill, where they were met on the
next day by the main body of the Union army. The battle was renewed
with great spirit, and the Federals were barely saved from ruin by the
hard fighting of the division of General Smith, who covered the retreat
to the river. Nearly three thousand men, twenty pieces of artillery and
the supply-trains of the Federal army were lost in these disastrous bat-
tles. With great difficulty the flotilla descended the river from the direc-
tion of Shreveport ; for the Confederates had now planted batteries on the
banks. When the Federals had retreated as far as Alexandria, they were
again brought to a standstill ; the river had fallen to so low a stage that
the gunboats could not pass the rapids. The squadron was finally saved
from its peril by the skill of Colonel Bailey of Wisconsin, who constructed
a dam across the river, raising the water so that the vessels could bo
floated over. The whole expedition returned as rapidly as possible to
the Mississippi. General Steele had, in the mean time, made an advance
from Little Rock to aid in the reduction of Shreveport ; but learning of
the Federal defeats, he withdrew after several severe engagements. To the.
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS.
525
national government the Red River expedition was a source of much
shame and mortification. General Banks was relieved of his command,
and General Canby was appointed to succeed him.
On the 2d of March, 1864, General Grant was appointed com-
mander-in-chief of all the armies of the United States. The high grade
of lieutenant-general was revived by act of Congress, and conferred upon
him. No less than seven hundred thousand Union soldiers were now to
move at his command. The first month after his appointment was spent
in planning the great campaigns of the year. These were tAvo in num-
ber. The Army of the Potomac, under command of Meade and the gen-
€ral-in-chief, was to ad-
vance upon Richmond,
still defended by the
Army of Northern Vir-
ginia, under Lee. Gen-
eral Sherman, command-
ing the army at Chatta-
nooga, now numbering
a hundred thousand men,
was to march against
Atlanta, which was de-
fended by the Con fed- ^^
erates, under General
Johnston. To these t\A^o
great movements all other military operations were to be subordinate.
On the 7th of May General Sherman moved forward from Chatta-
nooga. At Dalton he was confronted by the Confederate army, sixty thou-
sand strong. After some manoeuvring and fighting, he succeeded in turning
Johnston's flank, and obliged him to fall back to Resaca. After two hard
battles on the 14th and 15th of May, this place was also carried, and the
Confederates retreated by way of Calhoun and Kingston to Dallas.
Here, on the 28th, Johnston made a second stand, entrenched himself
and fought, but was again outnumbered, outflanked, and compelled to
fall back to Lost Mountain. From this position he was forced on the
17th of June, after three days of desultory fighting. The next stand of
the Confederates was made on the Great and Little Kenesaw Mountains.
From this line on the 22d of June the division of General Hood made a
fierce attack upon the Union centre, but was repulsed with heavy losses.
Five days afterward General Sherman attempted to coxry the Great Ken-
esaw by storm. The assault was made with great audacity, but ended in
a dreadful repulse and a loss of three thousand men. Sherman, undis-
SHERMAN'S CAMPAIGN, 1861.
526 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
mayed by his reverse, resumed his former tactics, outflanked his antago-
nist, and on the 3d of July compelled him to retreat across the Chatta-
hoochee. By the 10th of the month the whole Confederate army had
retired within the defences of Atlanta.
This stronghold of the Confederacy was at once besieged. Here
were the great machine-shops, foundries, car- works and ddpots of supplies
upon the possession of which so much depended. At the very beginning
of the siege the cautious and skillful General Johnston was superseded by
the rash but daring General J. B. Hood. It was the policy of the latter
to fight at whatever hazard. On the 20th, 22d and 28th of July he made
three desperate assaults on the Union lines around Atlanta, but was re-
pulsed with dreadful losses in each engagement. It was in the beginning
of the second of these battles that the brave General James B. McPherson,
the pride of the Union army, was killed while reconnoitring the Con-
federate lines. In the three conflicts the Confederates lost more men
than Johnston had lost in all his masterly retreating and fighting between
Chattanooga and Atlanta. For more than a month the siege was pressed
with great vigor. At last, by an incautious movement, Hood separated
his army ; Sherman thrust a column between the two divisions ; and the
immediate evacuation of Atlanta followed. On the 2d of September the
Union army marched into the captured city. Since leaving Chattanooga
General Sherman had lost fully thirty thousand men ; and the Confederate
losses were even greater.
By retiring from Atlanta Hood saved his army. It was now his
policy to strike nortliM'ard into Tennessee, and thus compel Sherman to
evacuate Georgia. But the latter had no notion of losing his vantage-
ground ; and after following Hood north of the Chattahoochee, he turned
back to Atlanta. The Confederate general now swept up through Northern
Alabama, crossed the Tennessee at Florence and advanced on Nashville.
Meanwhile, General Thomas, with the Army of the Cumberland, had
been detached from Sherman's army at Atlanta and sent northward to
confront Hood in Tennessee. General Scliofield, who commanded the
Federal forces in the southern part of the State, fell back before the Con-
federates and took post at Franklin, eighteen miles south of Nashville.
Here, on the 30th of November, he was attacked by Hood's legions, and
after a hard-fought battle held them in check till nightfall, when he
escaped across the river and retreated within the defences of Nashville.
At this place all of General Thomas's forces were rapidly concentrated.
A line of entrenchments was drawn around the city on the south. Hood
came on, confident of victor}^, and prepared to begin the siege by block-
ading the Cumberland ; but before the work was fairly begun. General
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS.
527'
Thomas, on the 15th of December, moved from his works, fell upon the
Confederate army, and routed it with a loss, in killed, wounded and
prisoners, of more than
twenty-five thousand
men. For many days
of freezing weather
Hood's shattered col-
umns were pursued,
until at last they found
refuge in Alabama.
The Confederate army
was ruined, and the
rash general who had
led it to destruction
was relieved of his
command.
On the 14th of
November General
Sherman burned At-
lanta and began his
famous March to
THE Sea. His army
of veterans numbered
sixty thousand men.
Believing that Hood's
army would be de-
stroyed in Tennessee, and knowing that no Confederate force could with-
stand him in front, he cut his communications with the JSTorth, abandoned
his base of supplies, and struck out boldly for the sea-coast, more than
two hundred and fifty miles away. As had been foreseen, the Confed-
erates could oifer no successful resistance. The Union army swept on
through Macon and Milledgeville ; reached the Ogeechce and crossed in
safety ; captured Gibson and Waynesborough ; and on the 10th of De-
cember arrived in the vicinity of Savannah. On the ISth Fort McAllister,
below the city, was carried by storm by the division of General Hazen,
On tlie night of the 20th General Hardee, the Confederate commandant,
escaped from Savannah with fifteen thousand men and retreated to
Charleston. On the followinsj mornino- the national advance entered,
and on the 22d General Sherman made his headquarters in the city. On
his march from Atlanta he had lost only five hundred and sixty-seven men.
The month of January, 1865, was spent by the Union army at
GENERAL THOMAS.
528
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Savannah. On the 1st of February General Sherman, having garri-
soned the city, began his march against Columbia, the capital of South
Carolina. To the Confederates the further progress of the invasion
through the swamps and morasses of the State had seemed impossible.
Now that the veteran
legions were again
in motion, alarm
and terror pervaded
the country. Gov-
ernor Magarth had
already summoned
to the field every
white man in the
State between the
ages of sixteen and
sixty ; but the requi-
sition was compar-
atively ineffectual.
Nevertheless, the
Confederates formed
a line of defence
along the Salkhatch-
ie and prepared to
dispute Sherman's
march northward.
It was all in vain.
The passages of the
river were forced,
and on the 11th of the month the Confederate lines of communica-
tion between Charleston and Augusta were cut oif. On the next day
Orangeburg was taken by the Seventeenth Corps. On the 14th the
fords and bridges of the Congaree were carried and the State road
opened in the direction of Columbia. The several divisions pressed
rapidly forward; bridges were thrown across the Broad and Saluda
Rivers, and the capital lay at the mercy of the conquerors. On the
morning of the 17th Mayor Goodwyn and a committee of the com-
mon council came out in carriages and the city was formally sur-
rendered.
As soon as it became certain that Columbia must fall into the
hands of the Federals, General Hardee, the commandant of Charles-
ton, determined to abandon that city also, and to join Generals Beau-
GENF.RAL SHERMAX.
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS. 529
regard and Johnston in North Carolina. Accordingly, on the day of
the capture of the capital, guards were detailed to destroy all the ware-
houses, stores of cotton, and depots of supplies in Charleston. The
torch was applied, the flames raged, and consternation spread through-
out the city. The great depot of the Northwestern Railway, where a
large quantity of powder was stored, caught fire, blew up with terrific
violence, and buried two hundred people in the ruins. Not until four
squares in the best part of the city were laid in ashes was the confla-
gration checked. During the same night General Hardee with his
fourteen thousand troops escaped from desolate Charleston and made
his way northward. On the morning of the 18th the news was borne
to the National forces on James's and Morris Islands. During the
forenoon the Stars and Stripes were again raised over Forts Sumter,
Ripley, and Pinckney. Mayor Macbeth surrendered the city to a
company which was sent up from Morris Island. The work of saving
whatever might be rescued from the flames was at once begun, the
citizens and the Federal soldiers working together. By strenuous ex-
ertions the principal arsenal was saved; a depot of rice was also pre-
served and its contents distributed to the poor. Colonel Stewart L.
Woodford of the One Hundred and Twenty-seventh New York was
appointed military governor; and relations, more friendly than might
have been expected, were soon established between the soldiery and
the citizens.
After destroying the arsenals, machine shops, and founderies of
Columbia General Sherman immediately renewed his march north-
ward in the direction of Charlotte, North Carolina. The army swept
on without opposition as far as Winnsboro, where a junction was ef-
fected with the Twentieth Corps under Slocum. Crossing the Great Pe-
dee at Cheraw, the Union commander pressed on towards Fayetteville
where he arrived without serious hindrance, and on the 11th of March
took possession of the town. Three days before the campaign had
been rendered exciting by a dashing fight between Hampton's and
Kilpatrick's cavalry. The former ofi&cer was defending the rear of
Hardee's column on the retreat from Charleston when the latter, re-
solving to intercept him, cut through the Confederate lines. But
early the next morning Kilpatrick was surprised in his quarters, at-
tacked, and routed, himself barely escaping on foot into a swamp.
Here, however, he suddenly rallied his forces, turned on the Confed-
erates and scattered them in a brilliant charge. Hampton, not less
resolute than his antagonist, now made a rally and returned to the
onset. But Kilpatrick held his ground until he was reinforced by &
84
530 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
division of the Twentieth Corps under General Mitchell, when the
Confederates were finally driven back. The Union cavalry then pro-
ceeded without further molestation to Fayetteville where Sherman's
forces were concentrated on the 11th of March.
General Johnston had now been recalled to the command of the
Confederate forces, and the advance of the Union forces began to be
seriously opposed. At Averasborough, on Cape Fear River, a short
distance north of Fayetteville, General Hardee made a stand, but was-
repulsed with considerable loss. When, on the 19th of March, Gen-
eral Sherman was incautiously approaching Bentonsville, he was sud-
denly attacked by the ever-vigilant Johnston, and for a while the
Union army, after all its marches and victories, was in danger of des-
truction. But the tremendous fighting of General Jefferson C. Davis's
division saved the day, and on the 21st Sherman entered Goldsborough
unopposed. Here he was reinforced by a strong column from New-
bern under General Schofield, and another from Wilmington com-
manded by General Terry. The Federal army now turned to the
north-west, and on the 13th of April entered Raleigh. This was the
end of the great march ; and here, thirteen days after his arrival. Gen-
eral Sherman received the surrender of Johnston's army.
While these great and decisive events were taking place in the-
Carolinas, the famous cavalry raid of General Stoneman was in pro-
gress. About the middle of March he set out from Knoxville with a
force of six thousand men, crossed the mountains, captured Wilkes-
boro, and forced his way across the Yadkin at Jonesville. It had
been the original purpose of the raid that Stoneman should make a
diversion in favor of Sherman by striking into the western districts
of South Carolina; but that commander, by the celerity of his move-
ments, had already reached Goldsboro in the North State, and was in
no need of help. Stoneman's movement therefore became an inde-
pendent expedition, the general object being the destruction of public
property, the capture of Confederate stores, and the tearing up of
railroads. Turning to the north, the troopers traversed the western
end of North Carolina and entered Carroll county, Virginia. At
Wytheville the railroad was torn up, and then the whole line was de-
stroyed from the bridge over New River to within four miles of Lynch-
liurg. Christiansburg was captured and the track of the railway ob-
literated for ninety miles. Turning first to Jacksonville and then
southward, the expedition next struck and destroyed the North Caro-
lina Railroad between Danville and Greensboro. The track in the
direction of Salisbury was also torn up, and the factories at Salem
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS.
531
burned. The Union prisoners at Salisbury were removed by the
Confederates in time to prevent their liberation ; but the town was
captured and a vast store of ammunition, arms, provision, clothing, and
cotton fell into the hands of the raiders. Finally, on the 19th of April,
a division under Major Moderwell reached the great bridge where tlic
South Carolina Rail-
road crosses the Ca-
tawba River. This
niaernificent struct-
ure, eleven hundred
and fifty feet in
length, was set on
fire and completely
destroyed. After a
iight with F e r g u -
son's Confederate
ADMIRAL FARKAGUT.
cavalry, the Feder-
als turned back to
Dallas, where all the
divisions were con-
centrated,— and the
raid was at an end.
During the progress
of the expedition
six thousand prison-
ers, forty-six pieces
of artillery, and im-
mense quantities of
small arms had fallen into the hands of Stoneman's men : the amount
of property destroyed and the damage otherwise done to the tottering
Confederacy could not be estimated.
Meanwhile, events of even greater importance had occurred on
the gulf and the Atlantic coast. In the beginning of August, 1864,
Admiral Farragut bore down with a powerful squadron upon the de-
fences of Mobile. The entrance to the harbor of this city was com-
manded on the left by Fort Gaines, and on the right by Fort Morgan.
The harbor itself was defended by a Confederate fleet and the monster
iron-clad ram Tennessee. On the 5th of August Farragut prepared
for battle and ran past the forts into the harbor. In order to direct
the movements of his vessels, the brave old admiral mounted to the
maintop of his flag-shij), the Hartford, lashed himself to the rigging,
532 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and from that high perch gave his commands during the battle. One
of the Union ships struck a torpedo and went to the bottom. The
rest attacked and dispersed the Confederate squadron ; but just as the
bay seemed won the terrible Tennessee came down at full speed to
strike and sink the Hartford. The latter avoided the blow ; and then
followed one of the fiercest conflicts of the war. The Union iron-clads
closed around their black antagonist and battered her with their beaks
and fifteen-inch bolts of iron until she surrendered. Two days after-
ward Fort Gaines was taken ; and on the 23d of the month Fort
Morgan was obliged to capitulate. The port of Mobile was effectually
sealed up.
Not less important to the Union cause was the capture of Fort
Fisher. This powerful fortress commanded the entrance to Cape Fear
River and Wilmington — the last sea-port held by the Confederates. In
December Admiral Porter was sent with the most powerful American
squadron ever afloat to besiege and take the fort. General Butler, with
a land-force of six thousand five hundred men, accompanied the expedi-
tion. On the 24th of the month the bombardment began, and the troops
were sent ashore with orders to carry the works by storm. When Gen
eral Weitzel, Avho led the column, came near enough to the fort to recon-
noitre, he decided that an assault could only end with the destruction of
his army. General Butler held the same opinion, and the enterprise was
abandoned. Admiral Porter remained before Fort Fisher with his fleet,
and General Butler returned with the land-forces to Fortress Monroe.
Early in January the same troops were sent back to Wilmington, under
command of General Terry. The siege was at once renewed by the army
and the fleet, and on the 15th of the month Fort Fisher was taken by
storm.
In the previous October the control of Albemarle Sound had been
secured by a daring exploit of Lieutenant Gushing of tlie Federal navy.
These waters were commanded by a tremendous iron ram called the Albe-
marle. In order to destroy the dreaded vessel a number of daring volun-
teers, led by Gushing, embarked in a small steamer, and on the night of
the 27th of October entered the Roanoke. The ram was discovered lying
at the harbor of Plymouth. Cautiously approaching, the lieutenant with
his own hands sank a terrible torpedo under the Confederate ship, ex-
ploded it, and left the ram a ruin. The adventure cost the lives or cap-
ture of all of Cushing's party except himself and one other, who escaped.
A few days afterward the town of Plymouth was taken by the Federals.
During the progress of the war the commerce of the United States
had suffered dreadfully from the attacks of Confederate cruisers. As
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS. 533
early as 1861 the Southern Congress had granted commissions to priva-
teers ; but neutral nations would not allow such vessels to bring prizes
into their ports, and the Privateering Act was of little direct benefit to
the Confederacy. But the commerce of the United States was greatly
injured. The first Confederate ship sent out was the Savannah, which
was captured on the same day that she escaped from Charleston. In June
of 1861 the Sumter, commanded by Captain Semmes, ran the blockade at
New Orleans, and for seven months did fearful work with the Union
merchantmen. But in February of 1862 Semmes was chased into tlie
harbor of Gibraltar, where he Avas obliged to sell his vessel and discharge
his crew. In the previous October the Nashville ran out from Charles-
ton, went to England, and returned with a cargo worth three millions of
dollars. In March of 1863 she was sunk by a Union iron-clad in the
mouth of the Savannah River.
The ports of the Southern States were now so closely blockaded
that war-vessels could no longer be sent abroad. In this emergency the
Confederates turned to the ship-yards of Great Britain, and from that
vantage-ground began to build and equip their cruisers. In spite of the
remonstrances of the United States, the British government connived at
this proceeding ; and here was laid the foundation of a difficulty which
afterward cost the treasury of England fifteen millions of dollars. In the
harbor of Liverpool the Florida Avas fitted out ; and going to sea in the
summer of 1862, she succeeded in running into Mobile Bay. Escaping
in the following January, she destroyed fifteen merchantmen, was cap-
tured in the harbor of Bahia, Brazil, and brought into Hampton Roads,
where an accidental collision sent her to the bottom. The Georgia, the
Olustee, the Shenandoah and the Cliickamauga, all built at the ship-yards
of Glasgow, Scotland, escaped to sea and made great havoc with the mer-
chant-ships of the United States. At the capture of Fort Fisher the
Chiokamauga and another cruiser called the Tallahassee were blown up
by the Confederates. The Georgia was captured in 1863, and the Shen-
andoah continued abroad until the close of the war.
Most destructive of all the Confederate vessels was the famous
Alabama, built at Liverpool. Her commander was Captain Raphael
Semmes, the same who had cruised in the Sumter. A majority of the
crew of the Alabama were British subjects ; her armament was entirely
British; and whenever occasion required, the British flag was carried.
In her w^hole career, involving the destruction of sixty-six vessels and a
loss of ten million dollars to the merchant service of the United States,
she never entered a Confederate port, but continued abroad, cajituring
and burning. Early in the summer of 1864 Semmes entered the harbor
534 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of Cherbourg, France, and was there discovered by Captain Winslow,
commander of the steamer Kearsarge. The French government gave
the Confederate captain orders to leave the port, and on the 19th of
June he went out to give his antagonist battle. Seven miles from
the shore the two ships closed for the death-struggle; and after a
desperate battle of an hour's duration, the Alabama was shattered
and sunk. Semnies and a part of his officers and crew were picked
up by the English yacht Deerhound and carried to Southampton.
After the great battle of Gettysburg, the Confederate army under
General Lee was withdrawn into the Shenandoah valley. The Union
oavalry, led by General Gregg, pressed after him and at Shepherds-
town gained some advantage over the division of Fitzhugh Lee.
Meade himself, at the head of the Army of the Potomac, entered Vir-
ginia near Berlin and moved southward through Lovettsville to War-
renton. The Blue Ridge was again interposed between the two armies.
It was the policy of the Union commander to preoccupy and hold the
passes of the mountains and to strike his antagonist a fatal blow when
he should attempt to return to Richmond. But Lee's movements
were marked witli his usual caution and sagacity. ISIaking a feint of
crowding his army through Manassas Gap, he succeeded in drawing
thither the bulk of the Federal forces, and then by a rapid march
southward gained Front Royal and Chester Gap, swept through the
pass, and reached Culpepper in safety. General Meade, disappointed
in his expectations of a battle, advanced his army and took up a po-
sition on the Rappahannock.
In the lull that ensued from July till September of 1863, both
generals were much weakened by the withdrawal of large numbers of
their troops to take part in the struggles of the Southwest. From
Lee's army Longstreet's whole corps had been detached for the aid of
Bragg who was hard pressed by Rosecrans, in Tennessee. General
Meade, learning of the weakened condition of his foe, crossed the
Rappahannock, pressed him back to the south bank of the Rapidan
and himself occupied Culpepper. Soon, however, Howard's and Slo~
cum's corps were withdrawn from the Army of the Potomac, and
Meade was in turn obliged to act on the defensive. But his ranks
were soon filled with reinforcements and the middle of October found
him planning a forward movement. Lee, however, had already as-
sumed the offensive and bv skillful manoeuvers had again thrown his
army on the Union flank. Then began the old race for the Potomac,
and in that the Federals were successful, reaching Bristow Station and
taking up a strong ])osition on the Heights of Centreville. Lee in
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS.
535
turn fell back and the two great armies at last came to rest for the
wi.nter, the one at Culpepper and the other on the Upper Rappahan-
nock.
In the following spring no movements of importance occurred
until the beginning of the campaign of the Army of the Potomac,
now commanded by Generals _
Grant and Meade ; and this,
which may well be consider-
ed as one of the great cam-
paigns of history, has been
reserved for the closing nar-
rative of the war. On the
night of the 3d of May, 1864,
the national camp at Culpep-
per was broken up, and the
march on Richmond was
begun. In three successive
summers the Union army
had been beaten back from
that metropolis of the Confed-
eracy. Now a hundred and
forty thousand men, led by
the lieutenant-general, were
to begin the final struggle
with the veterans of Lee.
On the first day of the ad-
vance Grant crossed the Rap-
idan and entered the Wilder-
ness, a country of oak woods and thickets west of Chancellorsville.
He was immediately confronted and attacked by the Confederate
army. During the 5th, 6th and 7th of the month the fighting con-
tinued incessantly with terrible losses on both sides; but the results
were indecisive. Lee retired within his intrenchments, and Grant
made a flank movement on the left in the direction of Spottsylvania
Court-house. Here followed, from the morning of the 9th till the
night of the 12th, one of the bloodiest struggles of the war. The
Federals gained some ground and captured the division of General
Stewart ; but the losses of Lee, who fought on the defensive, were less
dreadful than those of his antagonist.
After the battle of Spottsylvania, Grant again moved to the left,
*;rossed the Pamunkey to Hanovertown, and came to a place called
OPERATIONS IN VIRGINIA, '64, AND '65.
536 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Cold Harbor, twelve miles north-east of Richmond. Here, on the 1st
of June, he attacked the Confederates, strongly posted, but was re-
pulsed with heavy losses. On the morning of the 3d the assault was
renewed, and in the brief space of half an hour nearly ten thousand
Union soldiers fell dead or wounded before the Confederate entrench-
ments. The repulse of the Federals was complete, but they held their
lines as firmly as ever. Since the beginning of the campaign the
losses of the Army of the Potomac, including the corps of Burnside,
had reached the enormous aggregate of sixty thousand. During the
same period the Confederates had lost in killed, wounded and pris-
oners about thirty-five thousand men.
General Grant now changed his base to James River with a view
to the capture of Petersburg and the conquest of Richmond from the
south-east. General Butler had already moved with a strong division
from Fortress IMonroe, and on the 5th of ]May had taken Bermuda Hun-
dred and City Point, at the mouth of the Appomattox. Advancing
against Petersburg, he was met on the 16th by the corps of General
Beauregard and driven back to his position at Bermuda Hundred, where
he was obliged to entrench himself and act on the defensive. Here, on
the 15th of June, he was joined by General Grant's whole army, and the
combined forces moved against Petersburg. On the 17th and 18th sev-
eral assaults were made on the Confederate entrenchments, but the works
could not be carried. Lee's army was hurried within the defences, and
in the latter part of June Petersburg was regularly besieged.
IMeanwhile, movements of great importance were taking place in
the Shenandoah valley. When General Grant moved forward from the
Rapidan, he sent General Sigel up the valley with a force of eight thou-
sand men. "Wliile the latter was advancing southward he was met at
New Market, fifty miles above ^Winchester, by an army of Confederate
cavalry, under General Breckinridge. On the 15th of ]\Iay Sigel was
attacked and routed, and the command of his flying forces was transferred
to General Hunter. Deeming the valley cleared, Breckinridge returned
to Richmond, whereupon Hunter faced about, marched toward Lynchburg,
came upon the Confederates at Piedmont, and gained a signal victory.
From this i)lace he advanced with his own forces and the cavalry troops
of General Averill against Lynchburg ; but finding tliat he had run into
peril, he was obliged to retreat across the mountains into West Virginia.
By this movement the valley of the Shenandoah was again exposed to an
invasion by the Confederates.
In the hope of compelling Grant to raise the siege of Petersburg,
Lee immediately despatched General Early with orders to cross the Blue
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS. 537'^
Ridge, sweep down the valley, invade Maryland and threaten Washing-
toji city. With a force of twenty thousand men Early began his move-
ment northward, and on the 5th of July crossed the Potomac. On the
9th he met the division of General Wallace on the Monocacy, and de-
feated him with serious losses. But the check given to the Confederates
by the battle saved Washington and Baltimore from capture. After
dashing up within gunshot of these cities, Early ordered a retreat, and
on the 12th his forces recrossed the Potomac with vast quantities of
plunder. "^
General Wright, who was sent in pursuit of Early's army, fol-
lowed him as far as Winchester, and there, on the 24tli of July, defeated
a portion of his forces. But Early wheeled upon his antagonist, and the
Union troops were in turn driven across the Potomac. Following up his
advantage, the Confederate general next invaded Pennsylvania, burned
Chambersburg, and returned into the valley laden with spoils. Seeing
the necessity of putting an end to these devastating raids. General Grant
in the beginning of August appointed General Philip H. Sheridan to the
command of the consolidated army on the Upper Potomac. The troops
thus placed at Sheridan's disposal numbered nearly forty thousand, and
with these he at once moved up the valley. On the 19th of September
he came upon Early's army at Winchester, attacked and routed him in a
hard-fought battle. On the 22d he overtook the defeated army at Fish-
er's Hill, assaulted Early in his entrenchments, and gained another com-
plete victory.
In accordance with orders given by the commander-in-chief, Sher-
idan now turned about to ravage the valley. The ruinous work was fear-
fully well done; and what with torch and axe and sword, there was noth-
ing left between the Blue Eidge and the Alleghanies worth fighting for.
Maddened by this destruction and stung by his defeats, the veteran Early
rallied his shattered forces, gathered reinforcements, and again entered
the valley. Sheridan had posted his army in a strong position on Cedar
Creek, a short distance from Strasburg, and feeling secure, had gone to
Washington. On the morning of the 19th of October Early cautiously
approached the Union camp, surprised it, burst in, carried the position,
captured the artillery, and sent the routed troops flying in confusion to-
ward Winchester. The Confederates pursued as far as Middletown, and
there, believing the victory complete, paused to eat and rest. On the
previous night Sheridan had returned to Winchester, and was now com-
ing to rejoin his army. On his way he heard the sound of battle, rode
twelve miles at full speed, met the panic-struck fugitives, rallied them
with a word, turned upon the astonished Confederates, and gained one
.538 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the most signal victories of the war. Early's army was disorganized
and ruined. Such was the end of the strife in the valley of the Shen.in-
doah.
All fall and winter long, General Grant pressed the siege of Peters-
burg with varying success. On the 30th of July a mine was exploded
under one of the forts. An assaulting column sprang forward to carry
the works, gained some of the defences, but was finally repulsed with
heavy losses. On the 18th of August a division of the Union army
seized the Weldon Railroad and held it against several desperate assaults,
in which each army lost thousands of men. On the 28th of September
Batteiy Harrison, on the right bank of the James, was stormed by the
Federals, and on the next day General Paine's brigade of colored soldiers
carried a powerful redoubt on Spring Hill. On the 27th of October
there was a hard-fought battle on the Boydton road, soutli of Petersburg ;
and then the army went into quarters for the winter.
Late in February the struggle began anew. On the 27th of the
month General Sheridan, who had moved from the Shenandoah, gained a
victory over the forces of General Early at Waynesborough, and then joined
the commander-in-chief at Petersburg. On the 1st of April a severe
battle was fought at Five Forks, on the Southside Railroad, in which the
Confederates were defeated with a loss of six thousand prisoners. Ou
the next day Grant ordered a general assault on the lines of Petersburg,
and the works were carried. On that night the army of General Lee and
the members of the Confederate government fled from Richmond ; and on
the following morning that city, as well as Petersburg, was entered by the
Federal army. The warehouses of the ill-fated Confederate capital were
fired by the retreating soldiers, and the better part of the city was reduced
to ruins.
The strife lasted but a few days longer. General Lee retreated
-as rapidly as possible to the south-west, hoping to join the army of
General Johnston from Carolina. The Confederates, flying from Pe-
tersburg, joined those on the retreat from Richmond at Amelia Court
House. To this place General Lee had ordered his supply-trains;
but the officer having the same in charge, had foolishly mistaken his
orders and driven the train on in the direction of Danville. Nearly one-
half of the Confederate army, now growing hopeless, had to be dis-
persed to gather supplies by foraging. The 4th and 5th of April —
days precious to the sinking heart of Lee — were consumed with the
delay. The victorious Federals were pressing on in full pursuit; and
on the morning of the 6th nearly the whole Union army was at Jet-
tersville, on the Danville railroad, ready to strike the Confederates at
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS.
539
Amelia. Sheridan pressed on by the left flank in the direction of
Deatonsville. Ord came up with his division by way of the South
Side Railroad to Burke's Station. Lee fell back to the west from
Amelia Court House and reached Deatonsville where a severe battle
was fought, in which Ewell's division six thousand strong was over-
whelmed and captured by Sheridan. The main army of the Confed-
erates, however, gained the Appomattox at Farmville, crossed to the
northern bank, and burned the bridges. Lee noAv endeavored to in-
terpose the river as a barrier between himself and his relentless pur-
suers; but it was all in vain. Hoping against hope, he made a des-
"^ /-- — CONFED
^/ Federa
rrate retbkat
eral advance
Roads
-O \ Dogan & Folper Cig
PETERSBURG, RICHMOND, APPOMATTOX, 18C5.
perate effort to hold the line of the Lynchburg Railroad, but the vig-
ilant Sheridan was there before him. On the 7th of April a slight
.success in battle gave a momentary encouragement to the exhausted
army ; but the flame of hope was blown out as soon as kindled. On
that day General Grant, now at Farmville, addressed a note to the
Confederate commander expressing a desire that the further effusion
of blood might be saved by the surrender of the Confederate army.
To this General Lee replied by declaring his desire for peace but add-
ing that the occasion for the surrender of the Army of Northern
Virginia had not arrived. On the morning of the 9th, however,
when it became known that the left wing of the Union army had se-
cured the line of the Lynchburg Railroad — when the wreck of Long-
street's veterans, attempting to continue the retreat, were confronted
and driven back bv Sheridan — then the iron-souled Confederate leader,
seeing the utter uselessness of a further struggle, sent General Grant
a note asking for a meeting preliminary to a surrender. The Union
commander immediately complied with the request. At two o'clock
in the afternoon of Palm Sunday, the 9th of April, 1865j the two
540 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
great generals met each other in the parlor of William McLean at
Appomattox Court House. There the terms of surrender were dis-
cussed and settled. It was agreed that General Grant should put his
proposition in the form of a military note to which General Lee
should return a formal answer. The Union commander accordingly
drew up and presented the following memorandum :
Appomattox Court House, Va., April 9, 1865,
General: In accordance with the substance of my letter to you of the 8th inst-
ant, I propose to receive the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia on the fol-
lowing terms, to-wit : Kolls of all the officers and men to be made in duplicate ; one
copy to be given to an officer to be designated by me, the other to be retained by such
other officer or officers as you may designate. The officers to give their individual
paroles not to take up arms against the Government of the United States until properly
exchanged; and each company or regimental commander to sign a like parole for the
men of their commands. The arms, artillery, and public property, to be parked, and
stacked, and turned over to the officers appointed by me to receive them. This will not
embrace the side-arms of the officers nor their private horses or baggage. This done,
eacli officer and man will be allowed to return to his home, not to be disturbed by
United States authority so long as they observe their paroles and the laws in force
where they reside. ^ g_ GRANT, Lieutenant- Genercd.
To this memorandum General Lee responded as follows:
Head-Quarters, Army of Northern Virginia, April 9, 1865.
General: I received your letter of this date, containing the terms of the surren-
der of the Army of Northern Virginia, as proposed by you. As they are substantially
the same as those expressed in your letter of the 8th instant, they are accepted. 1
will proceed to designate the proper officers to carry the stipulations into eflfect.
R. E. LEE, General.
Thus the work was done ! How the army of General Johnston
was surrendered at Raleigh a few days later has already been nar-
rated. After four dreadful years of bloodshed, devastation, and sorrow,
THE Civil War in the United States was at an end.
The Federal authority was rapidly extended over the Southern
States. After the surrender of Lee and Johnston, there was no further
hope of reorganizing the Confederacy. Mr. Davis and his cabinet escaped
to Danville, and there for a few days kept up the forms of government.
From that place they fled into North Carolina and were scattered. The
ex-President with a few friends continued his flight through South Caro-
lina into Georgia, and encamped near the village of Irwinsville, ^here, on
the 10th of May, he was captured by General Wilson's cavalry. He was
conveved as a prisoner to Fortress INIonroe, and ke])t in confinement until
May of 1867, when he was taken to Richmond to be tried on a charge of
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS. 541
treason. He was admitted to bail ; and his cause, after remaining untried
for a year and a half, was finally dismissed.
At the presidential election in the autumn preceding the downfall
of the Confederacy, Mr. Lincoln was chosen for a second term. As Vice-
President, Andrew Johnson of Tennessee was elected in place of Mr. •
Hamlin. The opposing candidates, supported by the Democratic party,
were General George B. McClellan and George H. Pendleton of Ohio.
Mr. Lincoln's majority was very heavy. General McClellan carrying only
the States of Kentucky, Delaware and New Jersey. In the summer pre-
ceding the election the people of Nevada framed a constitution, in accord-
ance with an actof Congress, and on the 31st of October the new common-
wealth was proclaimed as the thirty-sixth State of the Union. The gold
and silver mines of Nevada were developed with such rapidity that they
soon surpassed those of California in their yield of the precious metals.
At the outbreak of the civil war the financial credit of the United
States had sunk to a very low ebb. By the organization of the army and
navy the expenses of the government w^re at once SMclled to an enormous
aggregate. The price of gold and silver advanced so rapidly that the
redemption of bank-notes in coin soon became impossible ; and on the
30th of December, 1861, the banks of New York, and afterward those of
the whole country, suspended specie payments. Mr. Chase, the secretary
of the treasury, first sought relief by issuing Treasury Notes, receivable
as money and bearing seven and three-tenths per cent, interest. This
■expedient was temporarily successful, but by the beginning of 1862 the
expenses of the government had risen to more than a million of dollars
daily.
To meet these tremendous demands other measures had to be
adopted. Congress accordingly made haste to provide an Internal
Revenue. This was made up from two general sources : first, a tax on
manufactures, incomes and salaries; second, a stamp-duty on all legal
documents. The next measure was the issuance by the treasury of a
hundred and fifty millons of dollars in non-interest-bearing Legal.
Tender Notes of the United States, to be used as money. These are
the notes called Greenbacks. The third great measure adopted by the
government was the sale of United States Bonds. These were made
redeemable at any time after five and under twenty years from date, and
were from that fact called Five- Twenties. The interest upon them w^as
fixed at six per cent., payable semi-annually in gold. Another important
series of bonds, called Ten-Forties, was afterward issued, being redeem-
able by the government at any time between ten and forty years from
<late. In the next place, Congress passed an act providing for the estab-
542 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
lishment of National Banks. The private banks of the country hail
been obliged to suspend operations, and the people were greatly distressed
for want of money. To meet this demand it was provided that new
banks might be established, using national bonds, instead of gold and
silver, as a basis of their circulation. The currency of these banks was
furnished and the redemption of the same guaranteed by the treasury of
the United States. By these measures the means for prosecuting the war
were provided. At the end of the conflict the national debt had reached
the astounding sum of nearly three thousand millions of dollars.
On the 4tli of March, 1865, President Lincoln was inaugurated for
his second term. A month afterward the military power of the Confed-
eracy was broken. Three days after the evacuation of Richmond by Lee's
army the President visited that city, conferred with the authorities, and then
returned to Washington. On the evening of the 14th of April he attended
Ford's theatre with his wife and a party of friends. As the play drew near
its close a disreputable actor, named John Wilkes Booth, stole unnoticed
into the President's box, leveled a pistol at his head, and shot him through
the brain. Mr. Lincoln fell forward in his seat, was borne from the
building, lingered in an unconscious state until the following morning, and
died. It was the greatest tragedy of modern times — the most wicked
atrocious and diabolical murder known in American history. The assassin
leaped out of the box upon the stage, escaped into the darkness, and fled.
At the same hour another murderer, named Lewis Payne Powell, burst
into the bed-chamber of Secretary Seward, sprang upon the couch of the
sick man, stabbed him nigh unto death, and made his escape into the
night. The city was wild with alarm and excitement. It was clear that
a plot had been made to assassinate the leading members of the govern-
ment. Troops of cavalry and the police of Washington departed in all
directions to hunt down the conspirators. On the 26th of April Booth
was found concealed in a barn south of Fredericksburg. Refusing to
surrender, he was shot by Sergeant Boston Corbett, and then dragged
forth from the burning building to die. Powell was caught, convicted
and hanged. His fellow-conspirators, David E. Herrold and Geo. A.
Atzerott, together with Mrs. Mary E. Surratt, at whose house the plot
was formed, were also condemned and executed. Michael O'Laugh-
lin, Dr. Samuel A. Mudd, and Samuel Arnold were sentenced to im-
prisonment for life, and Edward Spangler for a term of six years.
So ended in darkness, but not in shame, the career of Abraham
Lincoln. He was one of the most remarkable men of any age or country
— a man in whom the qualities of genius and common sense were strangely
mingled. He was prudent, far-sighted and resolute; thoughtful, calm
THE CLOSING CONFLICTS. 543"
nnd just; patient, tender-hearted and great. The manner of his
death consecrated his memory. From city to city, in one vast funeral
procession, the mourning people followed his remains to their last
resting-place at Springfield, From all nations rose the voice of sym-
pathy and shame — sympathy for his death, shame for the dark crime-
that caused it.
He had been born a destined work to do,
And lived to do it ; four long-suffering years —
Ill-fate, ill-feeling, ill-report lived tlirough —
And then he heard the hisses change to cheers,
Tlie taunts to tribute, the abuse to praise
And took them both with his unwavering mood;
But as he came on light from darkest days.
And seemed to touch the goal from where he stood,
A felon hand, between that goal and him.
Reached from behind his head, a trigger prest,
And those perplexed and patient eyes were dim,
Those gaunt long-laboring limbs were laid to rest!
The words of mercy were upon his lips,
Forgiveness in his heart and on his pen,
When this vile murderer brought swift eclipse '
To thoughts of peace on earth, good-will to men.
The Old World and the New, from sea to sea,
Utter one voice of sympathy and shame!
Sore heart, so stopped when it at last beat free.
Sad life, cut short just as its triumph came !
A deed accurst ! Strokes have been struck before
By the assassin's hand, whereof men doubt
If more of horror or disgrace they bore ;
But thy foul crime, like Cain's stands darkly out I
Vile hand ! that branded murder on a strife,
What e'er its grounds, stoutly and nobly striven,
And with the martyr's crown crownest a life
With much to praise, little to be forgiven ! *
* These verses are from the London Punch of May 6th, 1865. For years that paper
had caricatured Mr. Lincoln and ridiculed the National government ; but now that
the deed was done, the British heart reacted and spoke out for humanity.
•\,
544 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHAPTER LXVII.
JOHNSON'S ADMINISTRATION, 1865-1869.
ON the day after the assassination of Mr. Lincoln, Andrew Johnson
took the oath of office, and became President of the United States.
He was a native of North Carolina, born in Raleigh, on the 29th of
December, 1808. With no advantages of education, he passed his boy-
hood in poverty and neglect. In 1826 he removed with his mother to
Tennessee and settled at Greenville. Here he was married to an in-
telligent lady who taught him to write and cipher. Here by dint of
native talent, force of will, and strength of character, he first earned
the applause of his fellow-men. Here, through toil and hardship, he
rose to distinction, and after holding minor offices was elected to Con^
gress. As a member of the United States Senate in 1860-61 he op-
posed secession with all his zeal, even after the legislature had declared
Tennessee out of the Union. On the 4th of March, 1862, he was ap-
pointed military governor of that State, and entered upon his duties at
Nashville. He began his administration and carried out his measures
with all the vigor and vehemence of his nature. There was no quail-
ing or spirit of compromise. His life was many times in peril ; but he
fed on danger and grew strong under the onsets of his enemies. He
held the office of governor until 1864, when he was nominated for the
vice-presidency in place of Mr. Hamlin. Now, by the tragic death
of the President, he Avas suddenly called to assume the responsibili-
ties of chief magistrate. In his first congressional message he fore-
shadowed a })olicy of great severity towards the civil and military
leaders of the overthrown Confederacy.
On the 1st of February, 1865, Congress adopted an amendment to
the Constitution bv which slavery was abolished and forbidden in all the
States and Territories of the Union. By the 18th of the following De-
cember the amendment had been ratified by the legislatures of twenty-
seven States, and was duly proclaimed as a part of the Constitution. The
emancipation proclamation had been issued as a military measure; now
the doctrines and results of that instrument were recognized and incor-
porated in the fundamental law of the land.
On the 29th of May the Amnesty Proclamation was issued by
President Johnson. By its provisions a general pardon was extended to
all persons — except those specified in certain classes — who had participated
in the organization and defence of the Confederacy. The condition of the
pardon was that those receiving it should take an oath of allegiance to the
» 18 from Washington 13
JOHNSON'S ADMINISTBATJON 545
United States. The excepted persons might also be pardoned on
special application to the President. During the summer of 1865
the great armies were disbanded, and the victors and vanquished re-
turned to their homes to resume the work of peace.
The finances of the nation were in an alarming condition. The war-
debt went on increasing until the beginning of 1866, and it was only by
the most herculean exertions that national bankruptcy could be warded
off. The yearly interest on the debt had grown to a hundred and thirty-
three million dollars in gold. The expenses of the government had
reached the aggregate of two hundred millions of dollars annually. But
the augmented revenues of the nation proved sufficient to meet these
enormous outlays, and at last the debt began to be slowly diminished.
On the 5th of December, 1865, a resolution was passed in the House of
Representatives pledging the faith of the United States to the full pay-
ment of the national indebtedness, both principal and interest.
During the civil war the emperor Napoleon III. interfered in the
affairs of Mexico, and succeeded, by overawing the people with a French
army, in setting up an empire. In the early part of 1864 the crown of
Mexico was conferred on Maximilian, the archduke of Austria, who
established his government and sustained it with French and Austrian
soldiers. But the Mexican president Juarez headed a revolution against
the usurping emperor; the government of the United States rebuked
France for having violated the Monroe doctrine; Napoleon, becoming
alarmed, withdrew his army; and Maximilian was overthrown. Flying
from Mexico to Queretaro, he was there besieged and taken prisoner.
On the 13th of June, 1867, he was tried by court-martial and condemned
to be shot ; and six days afterward the sentence was carried into execu-
tion. The scheme of Napoleon, who had hoped to profit by the civil war
and gain a foothold in the New World, was thus justly brought to shame
and contempt.
After a fcAv weeks of successful operation the first Atlantic telegraph,
laid by Mr. Field in 1858, had ceased to work. The friends of the enter-
prise were greatly disheartened. Not so with Mr. Field, who continued
both in Europe and America to advocate the claims of his measure and to
plead for assistance. He made fifty voyages across the Atlantic, and
finally secured sufficient capital to begin the laying of a second cable.
The. work began from the coast of Ireland in the summer of 1865. When
the steamer Great Eastern had proceeded more than twelve hundred miles
on her way to America, the cable parted and was lost. Mr. Field held on
to his enterprise. Six millions of dollars had been spent in unsuccessful
attempts, but still he persevered. In July of 1866 a third cable, two
thousand miles in length, was coiled in the Great Eastern, and again the
546 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
vessel started on her way. This time the work was completely suc-
cessful. After twelve years of unremitting effort Mr. Field received
a gold medal from the Congress of his country, and the plaudits of
all civilized nations.
By an act of Congress, passed on the 1st of November, 1864,
THE Postal Money-Order System was established in the United
States. The design of the measure was to secure a safe and conven-
ient method of transferring small sums of money through the mails.
The money-order is divided into two parts — the order proper and the
advice. From the order, which is received and transmitted by the
purchaser, the name of the payee is omitted. In the advice, which is
sent by the post-master of the issuing office to the post-master of the
paying office, the name of the payee is inserted. The advice and the
order receive the same stamp and number, and being transmitted sep-
arately, constitute an almost perfect check against loss, robbery, and
fraud. The largest sum which may be transmitted in one order is
fifty dollars, though larger amounts may be sent in separate orders.
The amount charged for issuing is trifling, varying with the value of
the order, and the security is perhaps as great as human sagacity can
provide. Notwithstanding the invaluable benefits of the system, it
was at first received with little favor. In 1870 there were two thou-
sand and seventy-six post-offices from which money-orders were issued.
During that year the orders numbered a million six hundred and sev-
enty-one thousand two hundred and fifty-three; and the amount trans-
mitted was above thirty-four millions of dollars. On the 1st of October,
1875, the number of money-offices in operation was three thousand six
hundred and ninety-six ; the number of orders issued during the fiscal
year ending on the 30tli of June amounted to five millions six thou-
sand three hundred and twenty-three; the amount of money sent to
more than seventy-seven millions of dollars. Of all the orders issued
during that year only twenty-seven were paid to persons not entitled
to receive them. Such have been the advantages of the system as to
require its extension to foreign lands. Postal conventions have al-
ready been held and arrangements completed for the exchange of
money-orders with Switzerland, Great Britain and Ireland and Ger-
many. The requirements of civilization will no doubt soon demand
a similar compact with every enlightened nation.
The administration of President Johnson is noted as the time when
the Territories of the United States assumed their final form. The vast
domains west of the Mississippi were now reduced to proper limits and
organized with a view to early admission into the Union as States. A
JOHySON'S AD3IimSTRATI0K 547
large part of the work was accomplished during the administration of
President Lincohi. In March of 1861 the Territory of Dakota, with an
area of a hundred and fifty thousand square miles, was detached from.
Nebraska on the north, and given a distinct territorial organization. In
February'of 1863 Arizona, with an area of a hundred and thirteen thou-
sand square miles, was separated from New Mexico on the west and
organized as an independent Territory. On the 3d of March in the same
year Idaho was organized out of portions of Dakota, Nebraska and Wash-
ington Territories ; and on the 26th of May, 1864, Montana, with an area
of a hundred and forty-six thousand square miles, was cut off from the
eastern part of Idaho. By this measure the area of the latter Territory
was reduced to eighty-six thousand square miles. On the 1st of March,
1867, the Territory of Nebraska, reduced to its present area of seventy-
six thousand miles, was admitted into the Union as the thirty-seventh
State. Finally, on the 25th of July, 1868, the Territory of "Wyoming,
with an area of ninety-eight thousand square miles, was organized out of
portions of Dakota, Idaho and Utah. Thus were the Territories of the
great West reduced to their present limits as represented in the accom-
panying map.
The year 1867 was signalized by the Purchase of Alaska.
Two years previously the territory had been explored by a corps of
scientific men with a view of establishing telegraphic communication with
Asia by way of Behring Strait. The report of the exploration showed
that Alaska was by no means the worthless country it had been supposed
to be. It was found that the coast-fisheries were of very great value, and
that the forests of white pine and yellow cedar were among the finest in
the world. Negotiations for the purchase of tlie peninsula were at once
opened, and on the 30th of March, 1867, a treaty was concluded by which,
for the sum of seven million two hundred thousand dollars, Russia ceded.
Alaska to the United States. The territory thus added to the domains
of the Republic embraced an area of five hundred and eighty thousand
square miles, and a population of twenty-nine thousand souls.
Very soon after his accession to the chief magistracy a serious dis-
agreement arose between the President and Congress. The difficulty
grew out of the great question of reorganizinix the Southern States. The
particular point in dispute was as to the relation which those States had
sustained to the Federal Union during the civil war. The President held
that the ordinances of secession were in their very nature null and void,
and that therefore the seceded States had never been out of the Union.
The majority in Congress held that the acts of secession were illegal and
unconstitutional, but that the seceded States had been by those acts
548 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
actually detached from the Union, and that special legislation and special
guarantees were necessary in order to restore them to tlieir former rela-
tions under the government. Such was the real foundation of the diffi^
culty by vrhich the question of reconstructing the Southern States was so
seriously embarrassed.
In the summer of 1865 measures of reconstruction were begun by
the President in accordance with his own views. On the 9th of May a
proclamation was issued for the restoration of Virginia to the Union.
Twenty days afterward another proclamation was issued establishing a
provisional government over South Carolina; and at brief intervals
similar measures were adopted in respect to the other States of the late
Confederacy. On the 24th of June all restrictions on trade and inter-
course with the Southern States were removed by proclamation of the
President. On the 7th of the following September a second amnesty
proclamation was issued, by which all persons who had upheld the Con-
federate cause — excepting the leaders — were unconditionally pardoned.
Meanwhile, the State of Tennessee had been reorganized, and in 1866
was restored to its place in the Union. Meanwhile, the national Con-
gress was pursuing its own line of policy in regard to the reconstruc-
tion of the Southern States. During the session of 1865-66, a com-
mittee of fifteen was appointed by that body to whom all matters
appertaining to the reorganization of the States of the overthrown
Confederacy should be referred. Soon afterwards the celebrated Civil
Rights Bill was passed, the object of wdiich was to secure to the
freedmen of the South the full exercise of citizenship. The measure
was opposed and vetoed by the President, but was immediately re-
passed by a two-thirds congressional majority. On the occasion of the
celebration of Washington's birthday at the Capital, the bill was se-
verely denounced by the President in a speech delivered in front of
the executive mansion ; and the position assumed by Congress was de-
clared to be a new rebellion against the government of the United
States. In subsequent speeches and messages the same sentiment was
reiterated, and the attitude of the executive and legislative departments
became constantly more unfriendly.
In the summer of 1866 a call was issued for a national conven-
tion to be held in Philadelphia on the 14th of August. The objects
had in view were not very clearly defined ; but it was understood that
the general condition of the country would be considered, measures
of national policy discussed, and all the political elements, in opposi-
tion to the majority in Congress be consolidated into a new political
party, with which the President's name would be associated in leader-
JOHNSON'S ADMINISTRATION. 549
ship. At the appointed time delegates from all the States and terri-
tories were present; many members of the Republican party took part
in the movement, and the convention was not lacking in enthusiasm.
Still, the meeting exercised but very little permanent influence on the-
affairs of the country.
Soon afterwards the President made another effort to rally pub-
lic opinion in favor of his policy. In the latter part of August he
set out from Washington, accompanied by Secretaries Seward, Welles,,
and Randall, General Grant, Admiral Farragut, and other prominent
officials, to make a tour of the Northern States. The ostensible ob-
ject had in view was that the President should be present at the laying
of the corner stone of a monument to Senator Douglas at Chicago.
Departing from the Capital, the presidential party passed through Phil-
adelphia, New York, and Albany, and after taking part in the cere-
monies at Chicago, returned by way of St. Louis, Indianapolis, Louis-
ville, Cincinnati, and Pittsburg. At all the jirincipal towns and cities
through which he passed, the President spoke freely to the crowds in
defence of his own policy and in denunciation of that of Congress.
The whole journey was a scene of intense excitement and partisan ani-
mosity. The general effect of the President's course was disastrous
to him and his political adherents; for in the elections of the follow-
ing autumn the measures of Congress were sustained and the members
reelected by increased popular majorities. Nevertheless, the result of
the election had very little effect in altering the President's views or
softening his feelings towards the legislative department of the gov-
ernment.
By degrees the affairs of the administration grew critical. When
Congress convened in December of 1866 the policy of the President
was severely condemned. The congressional committee, appointed at
the session of the previous year, now brought forward a report em-
bodying a full plan of reorganizing the Southern States. After much
discussion the measures proposed by the committee were adopted by
Congress, and the work of reconstruction was begun. As the first
condition for the readmission of a State into the Union it was enacted
that the people of the same, by their legislative assembly or other-
wise, should ratify the fourteenth amendment to the constitution which
declared the citizenship of all persons born or naturalized in the
United States. In furtherance of this policy Congress, at the same
session, passed an act requiring that in the national territories the
elective franchise should be granted without distinction of race or
color, before such territories should be admitted into the Union. A
550 • HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
similar measure was adopted in respect to the District of Columbia,
forbidding the further restriction of the right of suffrage to white
men. To all of these acts President Johnson opposed his veto ; but
in every case his objection was overcome by the two-thirds majority
in Congress.
Concerning the redrganization of the Southern States, the real
question at issue was as to whether a civil or a military method of re-
construction ought to be adopted. From the beginning, the President
had urged the superiority of the civil process. But in Congress the
opposite opinion prevailed, and the views of the majority were rather
intensified by the hostility of the executive. On the 2d of March,
1867, an act was passed by which the ten seceded States were divided
into five military districts, each district to be under the control of a
governor appointed by the President. After appointing the comman-
ders required by this law, the chief magistrate asked the opinion of
Mr. Stanbery, his attorney-general, as to the validity of the con-
gressional measures of reconstruction. An answer was returned that
most of the acts were null and void ; and the President accordingly
issued to the military commanders an order which measurably nulli-
fied the whole proceeding. But Congress passed a supplemental act
declaring the meaning of the previous law, and the process of reor-
ganization was continued under the congressional plan. The work,
however, was greatly retarded by the distracted counsels of the gov-
ernment and the chaotic condition of afJairs in the South. But in due
time the States of Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana,
North Carolina, and South Carolina were reconstructed, and in the
months of June and July, 1868, readmitted into the Union. In every
case, however, the readmission was effected against the protest, and
over the veto of the President.
In ihQ mean time, a difficulty had arisen in the President's cabinet
which led to his impeachment. On the 21st of February, 1868, he noti-
fied Edwin M. Stanton, secretary of war, of his dismissal from office.
The act was regarded by Congress as a usurpation of authority and a
violation of law on the part of the President. The reconstruction diffi-
culties had already broken off all friendly relations between the two
Houses and the executive. Accordingly, on the 3d of March, articles of
impeachment were agreed to by the House of Representatives, in ac-
cordance with the forms of the Constitution, and the cause was im-
mediately remanded to the Senate for trial. Proceedings began
before that body on the 23d of March and continued until the 26th
of May, when the President was acquitted. But his escape was
JOHNSON'S ADMINISTRATION.
551
very narrow; a two-thirds majority was required to convict, and
but one vote was wanting. Chief-Justice Salmon P. Chase, one of the
most eminent of American statesmen and jurists, presided over this
remarkable trial.
The time for
holding another presi-
dential election was
already at hand.
General Ulysses S.
Grant was nomina-
ted by the Republi-
'Cans, and Horatio
Seymour of New
York by the Demo-
crats. The canvass
v;as attended with
great excitement.
The people were still
agitated by the recent
strife through which
the nation had passed,
und the questions
most discussed by the
political speakers were
those
arising
out of
CHIEF-JUSTICE CHASE.
the civil war. The
principles advocated by the majority in Congress furnished the basis of
the Republican platform of 1868, and on that platform General Grant
was chosen by a very large electoral majority. The votes of twenty-
six States, amounting, in the aggregate, to two hundred and fourteen
ballots, were cast in his favor, while his competitor received only
the eighty votes of the remaining eleven States. Of the popular vote,
however, Mr. Seymour obtained two million seven hundred and three
thousand six hundred, against three million thirteen thousand one
hundred and eighty-eight given to General Grant. At the same elec-
tion, the choice for the vice-presidency fell on Schuyler Colfax of
Indiana.
552
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES,
CHAPTER LXVIII.
GRANT'S ADMINISTARTION, 1SG9-1S77.
ULYSSES S. GRANT, eighteenth President of the United States, is
a native of Ohio, born at Point Pleasant, in that State, April 27th,,
1822. At the age of seventeen he entered the United States Military
Academy at AYest Point, and v/a5 graduated in 1843. He served with
distinction and was
promoted for gallantry
in the Mexican war;
but his first national
reputation was won by
the capture of Forts
Henry and Donel-
son in 1862. From
that time he rajjidly
rose in rank, and in
March, 1864, received
the appointment of
lieutenant-general and
commander-i n-c h i e f
^ of the Union army.
'^ His subsequent career
at the head of that
army has already been,
narrated. At the
close of the war his
reputation, though
strictly military, was
very great; and his
being involved in
the imbroglio between President Johnson and Congress rather height-
ened than diminished the estimation in Avhich he was held by the
people of the North. Before the Republican convention, held at
Chicago on the 21st of May, 1868, he had no competitor, and was
unanimously nominated on the first ballot. On the day following his
inauguration as President, he sent in to the Senate the following
PRESIDENT GRANT.
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 553
nominations for cabinet officers: For secretary of state, Elihu B.
Washburne of Illinois; for secretary of the treasury, Alexander T.
Stewart of New York ; for secretary of the interior, Jacob D. Cox of
Ohio ; for secretary of the navy, Adolph E. Borie of Pennsylvania ;
for secretary of war, John M. Schofield of Illinois ; for postmaster-
general, John A. J. Creswell of Maryland; for attorney-general, E.
R. Hoar of Massachusetts. These nominations were at once con-
firmed ; but it was soon discovered that Mr. Stewart, being engaged
in commerce, was ineligible, and George S. Boutwell of Massachu-
setts was appointed in his stead. Mr. Washburne also gave up his
office to accept the position of minister to France; and the vacant
secretaryship was given to Hamilton Fish of New York.
The first event by which the new administration was signalized
was the completion of the Pacific Railroad. This vast enterprise was
projected as early as 1853; but ten years elapsed before the Avork of
construction was actually begun. The first division of the road ex-
tended from Omaha, Nebraska, to Ogden, Utah, a distance of a thou-
sand and thirty-two miles. The western division, called the Central
Pacific Railroad, reached from Ogden to San Francisco, a distance of
eight hundred and eighty-two miles. On the 10th of May, 1869, the
great Avork was completed with appropriate ceremonies.
Before the inauguration of President Grant two additional amend-
ments to the Constitution had been adopted by Congress. The first of
these, known as the Fourteenth Amendment, extended the right of citi-
zenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and de-
clared the validity of the public debt. This amendment was submitted
in 1867, was ratified by three-fourths of the States, and in the following
year became a part of the Constitution. A few weeks before the expiration
of Mr. Johnson's term the Fifteenth Amendment was adopted by Congress,
providing that the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not
be denied or abridged on account of race, color or previous condition of
servitude. This clause, which was intended to confer the right of suffi-age
on the emancipated black men of the South, was also submitted to the
States, received the sanction of three-fourths of the legislatures, and on
the 30th of March, 1870, was proclaimed by the President as a part of
the Constitution.
In the autumn of 1869 occurred the most extraordinary mone-
tary excitement ever known in the United States, or perhaps in the
world. A company of unscrupulous speculators in New York city,
headed by Jay Gould and James Fisk, jr., succeeded in producing
what is known as a "corner" in the gold market and brought the-
;554 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
business interests of the metropolis to the verge of ruin. During the
civil war the credit of the government had declined to such an extent
that at one time a dollar in gold was worth two hundred and eighty-
six cents in paper currency. But after the restoration of the national
authority the value of paper money appreciated, and in the fall of
1869 the ratio of gold to the greenback dollar had fallen to about one
liundred and thirty to one hundred. There were at this time, in the
banks of !New York, fifteen million dollars in gold coin and in the
sub-treasury of the United States a hundred millions more. The plan
of Gould and Fisk was to get control by purchase of the greater part
of the fifteen millions, to prevent the secretary of the treasury from
selling any part of the hundred millions under his authority, then —
having control of the market — to advance the price of gold to a fab-
ulous figure, sell out all which they held themselves, and retire from
the field of slaughtered fortunes Avith their accumulated millions of
spoils! Having carefully arranged all the preliminaries, the conspir-
ators, on the 13th of September, began their work of purchasing gold,
at the same time constantly advancing the price. By the 22d of the
month, they had succeeded in putting up the rate to a hundred and
forty. On the next day the price rose to a hundred and forty-four.
The members of the conspiracy now boldly avowed their determina-
tion to advance the rate to two hundred, and it seemed that on the
morrow they would put their threat into execution. On the morning
of the 24tli, known as Black Friday, the bidding in the gold-room
began with intense excitement. The brokers of Fisk and Gould ad-
vanced the price to a hundred and fifty, a hundred and fifty-five, and
finally to a hundred and sixty, at which figure they were obliged to
purchase several millions by a company of merchants who had banded
themselves together with the determination to fight the gold-gamblers
to the last. Just at this moment came a despatch that Secretary Bout-
well had ordered a sale of four millions from the sub-treasury ! There
was an instantaneous panic. The price of gold went down twenty
per cent, in less than as many minutes ! The speculators were blown
away in an uproar; but they managed, by accumulated frauds and
corruptions, to carry off with them more than eleven million dollars as
the fruits of their nefarious game! Several months elapsed before the
business of the country recovered from the effects of the shock.
In the first three months of 1870 the work of reorganizing the
Southern States was completed. On the 24th of January the senators
ami representatives of Virginia were formally readmitted to their seats in
Oongress, and the Old Dominion once more took her place in the Union.
TERRITORIAL GROWTH
>j. of the
1780 TO 1882
SCALE OF MILB
95 from Greenwich
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 555
■On the 23d of February a like action was taken in regard to MississipiM ;
and on the 30th of March the work was finished by tlie readmission of
Texas, the last of the seceded States. For the first time since the outbreak
of the civil war the voice of all the States was heard in the councils of
the nation.
In this year was completed the ninth census of the United States.
It was a work of vast importance, and the results presented were of the
most encouraging character. Notwithstanding the ravages of war, the
last decade had been a period of wonderful growth and progress. Durino"
that time the population had increased from thirty-one million four hun-
dred and forty-three thousand to thirty-eight million five hundred and
eighty-seven thousand souls. The centre of population had now moved
westward into the great State of Ohio, and rested at a point fifty miles
east of Cincinnati. The national debt, though still enormous, was rapidly
falling off. The products of the United States had grown to a vast
aggregate ; even the cotton crop of the South was regaining much of its
former importance. American manufactures were competing with those
of England in the markets of the world. The Union now embraced
thirty-seven States and eleven Territories.* From the narrow limits of
the thirteen original colonies, with their four hundred and twenty-one
thousand square miles of territory, the national domain had spread to the
vast area of three million six hundred and four thousand square miles.
Few things, indeed, have been more marvelous than the territorial growth
of the United States. The purchase of Louisiana more than doubled the
geographical area of the nation ; the several Mexican acquisitions were
only second in importance ; Avhile the recent Russian cession alone was
greater in extent than the original thirteen States. The nature of this
territorial development will be best understood from an examination of
the accompanying map.
In January of 1871 President Grant appointed Senator Wade of
Ohio, Professor White of New York and Dr. Samuel Howe of Massa-
chusetts as a board of commissioners to visit Santo Domingo and report
upon the desirability of annexing that island to the United States. The
question of annexation had been agitated for several years, and the
measure was earnestly favored by the President. After three months
spent abroad, the commissioners returned and reported in favor of the
proposed annexation ; but the proposal was met with violent opposition
in Congress, and defeated.
The claim of the United States against the British government for
damages done to American commerce by Confederate cruisers during the
* Including the Indian Territory and Alaska.
556 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
civil war still remained unsettled. These cruisers had been built and.
equipped in English ports and with the knowledge of the English gov-
ernment. Such a proceeding was in plain violation of the law of nations^
even if the independence of the Confederate States had been recognized.
Time and again Mr. Seward remonstrated with the British authorities,
but without effect. After the war Great Britain became alarmed at her
own conduct, and grew anxious for a settlement of the difficulty. On
the 27th of February, 1871, a joint high commission, composed of five
British and five American statesmen, assembled at Washington city.
From the fact that the cruiser Alabama had done most of the injury
complained of, the claims of the United States were called the Alabama
Claims. After much discussion, the commissioners framed a treaty,
known as the Treaty of Washington, by which it was agreed that all
claims of either nation against the other should be submitted to a board
of arbitration to be appointed by friendly nations. Such a court w-as
formed, and in the summer of 1872 convened at Geneva, Switzerland.
The cause of the two nations was impartially heard, and on the 14th of
September decided in favor of the United States. Great Britain was
obliged, for the wrongs which she had done, to pay into the Federal
reasury fifteen million five hundred thousand dollars.
During the year 1871, there were laid and put into operation in
the United States no less than seven thousand six hundred and seventy
miles of railroad! There is perhaps no fact in the history of the
world which exhibits so marvelous a development of the jihysical
resources of a nation. Ere the mutterings of the civil war, with its
untold destruction of life and treasure, had died away in the distance,
the recuperative power, enterprise, and genius of the American peo-
ple were revealed, as never before, in establishing and extending the
lines of travel and commerce. In 1830 there were but twenty-three
miles of railway track in the New World. In 1840 the lines in the
United States had been extended to two thousand eight hundred and
eighteen miles. Ten years later there were nine thousand and twenty-
one miles of track. According to the reports for 1860, the railroads
of the country had reached the enormous extent of thirty thousand
six hundred and thirty-five miles ; and in the next ten years, embrac-
ing the period of the civil war, the amount was nearly doubled. Such
is the triumphant power of free institutions — the victory of free enter-
prise, free industry, free thought. There stands the fact! Let the
adherents of the Old World's methods, the eulogists of the j^ast, take
it and read it. Wherever the human race pants for a larger activity,
a more glorious exercise of its energies, let the story be told how the
f
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 557
United States, just emerged from the furnace of war, smarting with
wounds, and burdened with an enormous debt, built in a single year
more than twice as many miles of railroad as Spain, ridden with her
precedents of kingcraft and priestcraft, has ever built in her whole
career.
The year 1871 is noted in American history for the burnino- of
Chicago. On the evening of the 8th of October a fire broke out in De
Koven street, and was driven by a high wind into the lumber-yards and
wooden houses of the neighborhood. The flames leaped the South Branch
of the Chicago Eiver and spread with great rapidity through the business
parts of the city. All day long the deluge of fire rolled on, crossed the
main channel of the river, and swept into a blackened ruin the whole dis-
trict between the North Branch and the lake as far northward as Lincoln
Park. The area burned over was two thousand one hundred acres, or
three and a third square miles. Nearly two hundred lives were lost in
the conflagration, and the property destroyed amounted to about two
hundred millions of dollars. No such a terrible devastation had been
witnessed since the burning of Moscow in 1812. In the extent of the
district burned over, the Chicago fire stands first, in the amount of
property destroyed second, and in the suffering occasioned third, among
the great conflagrations of the world.
On the 21st of October, 1872, was settled the only remaining
dispute concerning the boundaries of the United States. By the terms
of the treaty of 1846 it was stipulated that the North-western bound-
ary line, running westward along the forty-ninth parallel of latitude,
should extend to the middle of the channel which separates the con-
tinent from Vancouver's Island, and thence southerly through the mid-
dle of said channel and of Fuca's Straits to the Pacific. But what was
^' the middle of said channel " ? for there were several channels. The
British government claimed the Straits of Rosario to be the true line
intended by the treaty, while the United States would have the Canal
de Haro. So the question stood for a quarter of a century, and was
then referred for settlement to the arbitration of William I., Em-
peror of Germany. That monarch heard the cause, decided in favor
of the United States, and the Canal de Haro became the international
boundary.
As the first official term of President Grant drew to a close the
political parties made ready for the twenty-second presidential election.
Many parts of the chief magistrate's policy had been made the subjects of
criticism and controversy. The congressional plan of reconstructing the
Southern States had prevailed, and with that plan the President was in
558
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
accord. But the reconstruction measures had been unfavorably re-
ceived in the South. The elevation of the negro race to the full rights
of citizenship was regarded with apprehension. Owing to the disor-
ganization of civil government in the Southern States, an opportunity
was given in certain districts for bad men to band themselves together
in lawlessness. The
military spirit was
still rife in the coun-
try, and the issues
of the civil war were
rediscussed, s o m e -
times with much
bitterness. On these
issues the people di-
vided in the election
of 1872. The Re-
publicans renomi-
nated General Grant
for the presidency.
For the vice-presi-
dency Mr. Colfax
declined a renomi-
nation, and was suc-
ceeded by Henry
Wilson of Massa-
chusetts. As the
standard ^ bearer of
the Liberal Repul^lican and Democratic parties Horace Greeley, ed-
itor of the New York Tribune, was nominated. This was the last act
in that remarkable man's career. For more than thirty years he had
been an acknowledged leader of public opinion in America. He had
discussed with vehement energy and enthusiasm almost every question
in which the people of the United States have any interest. After a
lifetime of untiring industry he was now, at the age of sixty-one,
called to the forefront of political strife. The canvass was one of
wild excitement and bitter denunciations. Mr. Greeley was over-
whelmingly beaten, and died in less than a month after the election.
In his death the nation lost a great philanthropist and journalism its
brightest light.
A few days after the presidential election the city of Boston was
visited by a conflagration only second in its ravages to that of Chicago-
HORACE GREELEY.
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 559.
in the previous year. On the evening of the 9th of November a fire
broke out on the corner of Kingston and Summer streets, spread to
the north-east, and continued with almost unabated fury until the
morning of the 11th. The best portion of the city, embracing some
of the finest blocks in the United States, was laid in ashes. The
burnt district covered an area of sixty-five acres. Eight hundred
buildings, property to the value of eighty million dollars, and fifteen
lives were lost bv the conflagration.
In the spring of 1872 an order had been issued to Superintendent
Odeneal to remove the Modoc Indians from their lands on the southern
shore of Lake Klamath, Oregon, to a new reservation. The Indians, who
had been greatly mistreated by former agents of the government, refused
to go ; and in the following November a body of troops w'as sent to force
them into compliance. The Modocs resisted, kept up the war during the
winter, and then retreated into an almost inaccessible volcanic region
called the lava-beds. Here, in the spring of 1873, the Indians were sur-
rounded, but not subdued. On the 11th of April a conference was held
between them and six members of the peace commission; but in the
midst of the council the treacherous savages rose upon the kind-hearted
men who sat beside them and murdered General Canby and Dr. Thomas
in cold blood. Mr. Meacham, another member of the commission, was
shot and stabbed, but escaped with his life. The Modocs were then be-
sieged and bombarded in their stronghold; but it was the 1st of June
before General Davis with a force of regulars could compel Captain Jack
and his murderous band to surrender. The chiefs Avcre tried by court-
martial and executed in the following October.
In the early part of 1873 a difficulty arose in Louisiana which
threatened the peace of the country. Owing to the existence of double
election-boards two sets of presidential electors had been chosen in the-
previous autumn. At the same time two governors — William P. Kellogg
and John McEnery — were elected; and rival legislatures were also re-
turned by the hostile boards. Two State governments were accordingly
organized, and for a while the commonwealth was in a condition bor(]er-
ing on anarchy. The dispute was referred to the Federal government,
and the President decided in favor of Governor Kellogg and his party.
The rival government was accordingly disbanded ; but on the 14th of
September, 1874, a large party, opposed to the administration of Kellogg
and led by D. B. Penn, who had been returned as lieutenant-governor
with McEnery, rose in arms and took possession of the State-house.
Governor Kellogg fled to the custom-house and appealed to the President
for help. The latter immediately ordered the adherents of Penn to dis-
560 JIISTOBY OF THE UNITED STATES.
perse, and a body of national troops was sent to New Orleans to enforce
the proclamation. On the assembling of the legislature in the following
December the difficulty broke out more violently than ever, and the sol-
diery was again called in to settle the dispute.
About the beginning of President Grant's second term, the country
was greatly agitated by what was known as the Credit Mobilier
Investigation in Congress. The Credit Mobilier of America was a
joint stock company organized in 1863 for the purpose of facilitating the
construction of public works. In 1867 another company Avhich had
undertaken to build the Pacific Railroad j)urchased the charter of the
Credit Mobilier, and the capital was increased to three million seven
hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Owing to the profitableness of the
work in which the company was engaged, the stock rose rapidly in value
and enormous dividends were paid to the shareholders. In 1872 a law-
suit in Pennsylvania developed the startling fact that much of the stock
of the Credit Mobilier ivas oioned by members of Congress. A suspicion
that those members had voted corruptly in the legislation affecting the
Pacific Railroad at once seized the public mind and led to a congressional
investigation, in the course of which many scandalous transactions were
brought to light, and the faith of the people in the integrity of their
servants greatly shaken.
In the autumn of 1873 occurred one of the most disastrous finan-
cial panics known in the history of the United States. The alarm
was given by the failure of the great banking-house of Jay Cooke &
Company of Philadelphia. Other failures followed in rapid succes-
sion. Depositors everywhere hurried to the banks and withdrew their
money and securities. Business was suddenly paralyzed, and many
months elapsed before confidence was sufficiently restored to enable
merchants and bankers to engage in the usual transactions of trade.
The primary cause of the panic was the fluctuation in the volume and
value of the national currency. Out of this had arisen a wild spirit
of speculation which sapped the foundations of business, destroyed
financial confidence, and ended in disaster.
Not the least of the evil results of the great monetary disturb-
ance was the check given to the Northern Pacific Railroad.
As early as 1864 a company had been organized under a congressional
charter to construct a railway from Lake Superior to Puget Sound.
The work also contemplated the running of a branch road, two hun-
dred miles in length, down the valley of the Columbia River to Port-
land, Oregon. Large subsidies were granted to the company by Con-
gress, and other favorable legislation was expected. In 1870 the work
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 561
of construction was begun and carried westward from Duluth, Minne-
sota. Jay Cooke's banking-liouse made heavy loans to the company,
accepting as security the bonds of the road; for it was confidently
expected that such legislation would be obtained as should secure the
success of the enterprise and bring the bonds to par. In this condi-
tion of affairs the Credit Mobilier scandal was blown before the coun-
try; and no Congress would have dared to vote further subsidies \o
a railroad enterprise. Jay Cooke's securities became comparatively
worthless; then followed the failures and the panic. The work of
constructing the road was arrested by the financial distress of the
country, and has since been pushed forward but slowly and with great
difficulty. In 1875 the section of four hundred and fifty miles, ex-
tending from Duluth to Bismarck, Dakota, had been put in opera-
tion ; and another section, a hundred and five miles in length, between
Kalama and Tacoma, in Washington Territory, had also been com-
pleted. Meanwhile, the attention of the country was turned to the
Texas and Pacific line, which had been projected from Shreveport,
Louisiana, and Texarkana, Arkansas, by Avay of El Paso to San Diego,
California — a distance from Shreveport of a thousand five hundred
and fourteen miles. In 1875 the main line had been carried west-
ward a hundred and eighty-nine miles to Dallas, Texas, while the line
from Texarkana had progressed seventy-five miles towards El Paso.
On the 4th of March, 1875, the Territory of Colorado was au-
thorized by Congress to form a State constitution. On the 1st of
July, in tlie following year, the instrument thus provided for, was
ratified by the people ; a month later, the President issued his proc-
lamation, and " the Centennial State " took her place in the Union.
The new commonwealth embraced an area of a hundred and four
thousand five hundred square miles, and a population of forty-two
thousand souls. Public attention was directed to the territory by the
discovery of gold, in the year 1852. Silver was discovered about the
same time, and in the winter of 1858-9, the first colony of miners
was established on Clear Creek and in Gilpin County. The entire
yield of gold up to the time of the admission of the State was esti-
mated at more than seventy millions of dollars. Until 1859, Colo-
rado constituted a part of Kansas ; but in that year a convention
was held at Denver, and in 1861 a distinct territorial organization
was effected. Since 1870, immigration has been rapid and constant.
The last years of the history of the Republic have been noted
-for the number of public men who have fallen by the hand of death.
In December of 18G9, Edwin M. Stanton, secretary of war under
.36
562
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
President Lincoln, and more recently justice of the supreme court of the
United States, died. In 1870 General Robert E. Lee, president of
Washington and Lee University, General George H. Thomas and Ad-
miral Farragut passed away. In 1872 William H. Seward, Professor
Morse, Horace Greeley and General Meade were all called from the
scene of their earth-
ly labors. On the
7th of May, 1873,
Chief-Justice Chase
fell under a stroke
of paralysis at the
home of his daugh-
ter in New York
City; and on the
11th of March in
the following year,
Senator Charles
Sumner of Massa-
chusetts died at
AVashington. He
was a native of Bos-
ton; born in 1811 ;
liberally educated at
Harvard College.
At the age of thir-
ty - five he entered
the arena of public
life, and in 1850 succeeded Daniel Webster in the Senate of the
United States. This position he retained until the time of his death,
speaking much and powerfully on all the great questions that agitated
the nation. His last days were spent in considering the interests
and welfare of that country to whose service he had given the life-
long energies of his genius. On the 22d of November, 1875, Vice-
President Henry Wilson, whose health had been gradually failing
since his inauguration, sank under a stroke of paralysis and died at
Washington city. Like Roger Sherman, he had risen from the shoe-
maker's bench to the highest honors of his country. Without the
learning of Seward and Sumner — without the diplomatic skill of the
one or the oratorical fame of the other — he nevertheless possessed
those great abilities and sterling merits which will transmit his name
to after times on the roll of patriot statesmen.
CHARLES SrMNER.
GE ANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 563
As the Centennial of American Independence drew near, the
people made ready to celebrate the great event with appropriate
ceremonies A hundred years of national prosperity-though not
unclouded by ominous shadows and not unhurt by the devastations
INDEPENDENCE HALL, 1876.
Of war-had swept away, and at last the dawn of the centennial
morning was rising in the eastern sky. It was not to be supposed
that the thoughtful and patriotic of the land would allow so lustrous
an epoch to go by without impressing upon the present generation the
564 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
lesson of the past and the hope of the fiitnre. As early as 1866, a
proposition was made by Professor John L. Campbell of Wabash
College, that steps should be taken looking to the proper celebration
of the great national anniversary. About the same time the question
of an international exhibition in honor of our independence, was
agitated by the Honorable John Bigelow, a former minister of the
United States to France. A correspondence was soon afterward
begun and carried on by the Honorable Morton McMichael, Mayor
of Philadcljjhia, Senator Henry S. Lane of Indiana, M. R. Muckle of
Pennsylvania, and General Charles B. Norton, who had served as a
commissioner of the United States at the Exposition Internationale of
1867. To these men, more than to others perhaps, must be awarded
the honor of having originated the Centennial Exposition. But it is
hardly to be supposed that the American people wonld have failed,
, from the want of leaders or any other circumstance, to mark with an
imposing display the hundredth year of the Republic.
Such was the origin of the movement ; but the development of
the project was discouraged for a while with considerable opposition
and much lukewarmness. The whole scheme was a vision of enthu-
siasm, a Quixotical dream, — said the critics and objectors. No such
ixw enterprise could be carried through except under the patronage of
the Government, and the Government had no right to make appropri-
ations merely to preserve an old reminiscence. We had had enough
of the Fourth of July already. Besides, — said the wits and caricatur-
ists,— the other nations would present a ludicrous figure in helping us
to celebrate the anniversary of a rebellion which they had tried to
crush a hundred years ago. Victoria was expected — so said they —
to send over commissioners to heap contumely and contempt on the
grave of her grandfather ! No nation of Europe would consent to its
own stultification by joining in the jubilee of republicanism. Besides
all this caviling, it was foreseen that Philadelphia would quite
certainly be selected as the scene of the proposed display, and on
that account a good deal of local jealousy was excited in the other
principal cities of the Union. Nevertheless, the advocates of the
enterprise continued to urge the feasibility and propriety of the
exposition ; the more enlightened newspapers of the country lent
tlieir influence, and the popular voice soon declared in favor of the
measure.
As early as the beginning of 1870, the general plan and princi-
pal features of the celebration had been determined in the minds of
its projectors. As to the form of the display, an International Expo-
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 565
sition of Arts and Industries was decided on ; as to the scene, the city
of Philadelphia, hallowed by a thousand Revolutionary memories,
was selected; as to the time, from the 19th of April to the 19th of
October, 1876. The first organized body to give aid and encourage-
ment to the enterprise was the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia.
Through the influence of that patriotic organization, a Centennial
Commission, consisting of seven members appointed by the city
council, was constituted, with John L. Shoemaker as chairman.
Shortly afterwards a resolution was adopted by the Legislature of
Pennsylvania, invoking the aid of Congress in behalf of the j^roposed
celebration ; and on the 3d of March, 1871, a bill was passed by the
House of Representatives, which became the basis of all subsequent
proceedings relating to the Centennial.
In this bill it was provided that an exhibition of American and
Foreign arts, products and manufactures should be held under the
auspices of the Government of the United States, in the city of Phil-
adelphia, in 1876 ; that a Centennial Commission, consisting of one
member and one alternate from each State and Territory, should be
appointed by the President; that to this board of commissioners should
be referred the entire management and responsibility of the enter-
prise ; that the members of the board should receive no compensa-
tion ; that the United States should not be liable for any of the
expenses of the exposition ; and that the President, when officially
informed that suitable buildings had been erected and adequate pro-
visions made for the proposed exhibition, should make proclamation,
of that fact to the people of the United States and to all foreign
nations. During the year 1871, the Centennial Commission was con-
stituted in accordance with the act of Congress. On the 4th of March,
1872, the members assembled at Philadelphia and effected a perma-
nent organization by the election of General Joseph R. Hawley of
Connecticut as President. Orestes Cleveland of Ne^v Jersey, John D.
Creigh of California, Robert Lowry of Iowa, Robert Mallory of Ken-
tucky, Thomas H. Coldwell of Tennessee, John McNeill of Missouri,
and William Gurney of South Carolina, were chosen as the seven vice-
presidents of the organization. As secretary, Professor John L. Camp-
bell of Indiana was elected. The important office of director-general
was conferred on Alfred T. Goshorn of Ohio ; and as counselor and
solicitor John L. Shoemaker of Pennsylvania was chosen.
The question of money next engaged the attention of the man-
agers. How to provide the funds necessary for carrying forward so
vast an enterprise became a source of much discussion and no little
bQQ
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
anxiety. The positive refusal of the government to become respon-
sible for any part of the expenses of the Exhibition added to the em-
barrassment; for it was now seen that private resources and the good
will of the people must furnish the entire sum necessary for the suc-
-cess of the enterprise. Several measures were accordingly adopted
by the Centennial Commis-
sion looking to the creation
of a treasury. By an act of
Congress, passed on the 1st
of June, 1872, provision was
made for the organization of
a Centennial Board of Fi-
nance, to which the whole
monetary management of
tiie Exposition should be
entrusted. This board was
organized by the election
of John Welsh of Philadel-
. phia as president. AYilliam
Sellers and John S. Barbour
were chosen vice-presidents.
The office of secretary and
treasurer was conferred on
Frederick Fraley ; that of
auditor, on H. S. Lansing ;
and that of finiincial agent, on William Bigler. The board was au-
thorized to issue stock in shares of ten dollars each, the whole num-
ber of shares thus issued not to exceed one million. It was also pro-
vided that a series of Centennial Memorial Medals should be struck at
the mint of the United States, and that the sale of such medals should
be under the exclusive control of the Board of Finance. The medals
were elegantly executed in several styles and sizes — of gilt, silver, and
bronze — furnishing for after ages an impressive token of the American
Ilcpublic in its hundredth year.
Careful estimates, made bv the Centennial Commission and the
Board of Finance, placed the entire expense of the Exposition at eight
million five hundred thousand dollars. Of this sum about two and a
half millions were raised by the sale of stock — a work which was at
first entrusted to the banks of the country and afterward to a Bureau
of Revenue established for that purpose. Long before this amount
was secured, however, the legislature of Pennsylvania made a glorious
GENERAL JOSEPH R. HAWLEY.
GRANTS ADMINISTRATION.
567
record for that State by appropriating one million dollars for the
Exhibition. The "City of Brotherly Love" did better still by voting
the sum of one million five hundred thousand dollars. The people
of New York City made a contribution of a quarter of a million.
The State of New Jersey gave a hundred thousand dollars; New
CENTENNIAL MEDAL.— OBVERSE.
CENTENNIAL MEDAL.— REVERSE.
Hampshire, Connecticut, and Delaware, ten thousand dollars each.
But notwithstanding these magnificent contributions, the aggregate
sum fell far short of the estimates ; and the Centennial Commission —
in the face of the former illiberal action of Congress — resolved to
make a second appeal to that body for help. A bill was accordingly
prepared, asking for an appropriation of three million dollars from
the national treasury; but on the 6th of May, 1874, the bill was
decisively defeated — an act well calculated to bring the American
name into contempt and shame.* The managers of the Exposition
■were again thrown back upon the people for sympathy and aid.
Meanwhile, the sale of stock and of medals, as well as other
enterprises for the increase of the Centennial funds, was going on
successfully. The Exposition gained constantly in public favor.
Even in the Far West, Centennial orators traveled through the
country districts, stirring up the enthusiasm of the people. The
public Free Schools, by exhibitions and excursions, contributed their
part towards the success of the great celebration. In June of 1874,
* After times may be astonished to know that the empire of Japan cheerfully
contributed six hundred thousand dollars to the success of the American Centennial
after the Congress of the United States had twice refused to vote a cent.
568 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the President of the United States extended a cordial invitation t<j
all the civilized nations of the world to particiimte in an Interna-
tional Exhibition of Arts, Manufactures, and Products of the Soil
and Mine, to be held in the city of Philadelphia in 1876, in honor
of the one hundredth anniversary of American Indef)endence. By
and by, the contagion spread even to Congress, and that body passed
an act appropriating five hundred and five thousand dollars for the
erection of a Centennial Building in honor of the United States and
for the illustration of the functions and resources of the American
Government in times of peace and of Avar. The legislatures of sev-
eral of the States also became interested in the enterprise, and made
appropriations — ranging from five thousand to fifty thousand dollars —
for the purpose of erecting State Buildings on the Exhibition
grounds, the sum thus contributed amounting to nearly a half
million dollars. Finally, as the success of the Exposition became
more and more assured, the patriotism of the people and the clamors
of the j)ress drove the national Congress into an appropriation of a
million five hundred thousand dollars to supply the deficit which was
still reported by the Board of Finance. Such were the principal
measures by .which the Centennial fund was finally secured.
One of the first matters to which the attention of the Centennial
Commission was directed, was the selection of suitable grounds for
holding the Exposition. But that problem was soon solved in the
most satisfactory manner. By the act of March 3d, 1871, it was
decided by Congress that the Exhibition should be held within the
corporate limits of Philadelphia. The authorities of that city, throw-
ing their whole energies into the enterprise, at once proffered to the
commissioners the free use of Fairmount Park, one of the largest
and most magnificent in the world. This beautiful tract, presenting
every variety of surface, well wooded and well watered, extends on
both sides of the Schuylkill for more than seven miles, and along the
banks of the Wissahickon for nearly the same distance. The entire
park embraces two thousand seven hundred and forty acres, and
presents to the eye every thing that is lovely and refreshing in
woodland scenery, beautified and adorned by the hand of art. The
portion of the grounds more particularly set apart for the purposes
of the Exposition, including an area of four hundred and fifty acres,
lies on the right bank of the Schuylkill, below Belmont, and was
formerly known as the old Lansdowne Estate.
The formal transfer of the grounds to the Centennial Commission
was made on the 4th of July, 1873. An immense throng of citizens
(569)
■570 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
and strangers gathered in the park to witness the ceremonies. The
address of presentation was made by the Honorable Morton Mc-
Michael of Philadelphia, and the response by General Hawley,
president of the Commission. The dedicatory oration was then
delivered by Governor Hartranft of Pennsylvania, who, after reciting
the congressional acts and various other measures upon which the
Centennial enterprise had thus far proceeded, continued in the
following eloquent manner :
"We have assembled here to dedicate a portion of this beauti-
ful park to the uses of a great International Exhibition, which is
to commemorate the anniversary of our country's birtli. Upon
the threshold of the century to expire in 1876, thirteen poor and
feeble colonies, with no common ties other than their love of liberty
and hatred of oppression, declared their independence. These
Thirteen Colonics, with their offspring, now increased in number to
thirty-seven, stretch their empire across a continent, and afford the
grandest exhibition of a nation's progress in the world's history. In
all the wondrous changes wrought in the nineteenth century, none
are so wondrous and conspicuous as the industrial, moral, and physi-
cal growth of this our native land. With those powerful auxiliaries,
steam and the telegraph — both of which our country gave to man-
kind— we are striding with majestic steps toward a dominion unri-
valed by any other nation on the face of the earth. Let us, then,
from every State — north, south, east, and west — bring to thi^ great
city, the consecrated place where our liberty was born, the evidences
of our culture, the proofs of our skill, and our vast and varied
resources, that the world may have a glimpse of our enlargement,
industry, wealth, and power. To the myriads who will gather here,
let us accord a welcome which shall be in keeping with the dignity
and magnitude of our country. Here, too, let our own people gather,
garnering new and fresh ideas from a survey of the world's arts and
industries; and let us dedicate ourselves to a higher civilization, to
more extensive fields of development, to more liberal and more widely
diffused education, to the purification of our institutions, and to the
preservation of that liberty which is the foundation-stone of our
prosperity and happiness."
Governor Hartranft was followed by George M. Robeson, secre-
tary of the navy, who read a proclamation by the President of the
United States ; and then the General Regulations for the government
•of the Exposition were announced as follows :
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 571
I. The International Exhibition of 1876 will be held in Fair-
mount Park, in the city of Philadelphia, in the year 1876.
II. The date of opening the Exhibition will be April 19th,
1876, and of closing will be October 19th, 1876.
III. A cordial invitation is hereby extended to every nation of
the earth to be represented by its arts, industries, progress, and
development.
lY. A formal acceptance of this invitation is requested previous
to March 4th, 1874.
V. Each nation accepting this invitation is requested to appoint
a Commission, through which all matters pertaining to its own inter-
ests shall be conducted. For the purpose of convenient intercourse
and satisfactory supervision, it is especially desired that one member
of every such Commission be designated to reside at Philadelphia
until the close of the Exposition.
VI. The privileges of exhibitors can be granted only to citizens
of countries whose governments have formally accepted the invitation
to be represented, and have appointed the aforementioned Commis-
sion; and all communications must be made through the Govern-
mental Commissions.
YIL Applications for space within the Exposition buildings, or
in the adjacent buildings and grounds under the control of the Cen-
tennial Commission, must be made previous to March 4th, 1875.
YIII. Full diagrams of the buildings and grounds will be fur-
nished to the Commissioners of the different nations which shall
accept the invitation to participate.
IX. All articles intended for exhibition, in order to secure
proper position and classification, must be in Philadelphia on or
before January 1st, 1876.
X. Acts of Congress pertaining to custom-house regulations,
duties, etc., together with all special regulations adopted by the Cen-
tennial Commission in reference to transportation, allotment of space,
classification, motive power, insurance, police rules, and other matters
necessary to the proper display and preservation of materials, — will be
promptly communicated to the accredited representatives of the sev-
eral governments cooperating in the Exposition.
On the day after the dedication of the grounds in Fairmount
Park, a copy of the President's proclamation, already mentioned, was
transmitted to each of the foreign ministers resident at Washington.
At the same time, the American secretary of state notified the minis-
572 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ters that the proposed display was intended as an International
Exhibition of Arts, Manufactures, and Products of the Soil and
Mine ; that the special design of the Exposition was to commemorate
the Declaration of the Independence of the United States; that
another prime object was to furnish to all nations an opportunity for
mutual improvement and a higher culture in beholding the products
of each other's civilization ; that the President of the United States
indulged the hope that all the diplomatic representatives of foreign
nations would bring the Exposition and its objects to the attention
of the people of their respective countries; and that the Exhibition
might greatly conduce to the establishment and perpetuation of in-
ternational friendship and good will. These official communications
were cordially received by the foreign ministers and by the govern-
ments which they represented. The President's invitations were
quickly accepted ; and before the expiration of the allotted time, the
following nations had notified the American Government of their
desire and intention to participate in the Exposition : The Argentine
Confederation, Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Chili, China, Den-
mark, Ecuador, Egypt, France (including Algeria), German Empire,
Great Britain and her Colonies, Greece, Guatemala, Hawaii, Hayti,
Honduras, Italy, Japan, Liberia, Mexico, Netherlands, Nicaragua,
Norway, Orange Free State, Persia, Peru, Portugal, Russia, Siam,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tunis, Turkey, United States of Colom-
bia, Venezuela.
One of the earliest and most difficult of the subjects which
engaged the attention of the Centennial Commission was the proper
analysis and classification of the materials to be exhibited. Until
this question was settled it could not be known what buildings to
erect or how to erect them. Nor could the various nations know in
advance how to select and arrange their products so as to come into
proper competition with each other, until a General Classification
should be prepared and reported. It was foreseen, moreover, that
a mistake in this regard would be in a great measure fatal to the
success of the Exposition, as a bad classification would be sure to
result in heaping up in the Centennial buildings a vast and chaotic
mass of materials which nobody could appreciate or understand. In
this important work of classification the Commissioners — considering
the magnitude and novelty of the task imposed upon them — succeeded
admirably. It was decided to arrange all of the materials which
should be presented for exhibition in ten great classes or departments^.
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 573
the names of which should suggest, even to the common beholder,
the particular object on display. The following was the General
Classification adopted by the Commission :
I. Raw Materials; Mineral, Vegetable, and Animal.
II. Materials and Manufactures used for Food or in
THE Arts ; the results of Extractive or Combining Processes.
III. Textile and Felted Fabrics; Apparel, Costumes, and
Personal Ornaments.
IV. Furniture and Manufactures of General Use in
Construction and in Dwellings.
V. Tools, Implements, Machines, and Processes.
VI. Motors and Transportation.
VII. Apparatus and Methods for the Increase and Dif-
fusion of Knowledge.
VIII.. Engineering; Public Works, Architecture, etc.
IX. Plastic and Graphic Arts.
X. Objects illustrating Efforts for the Iisiprovement
of the Physical, Intellectual, and Moral Condition of
Man.
Each of these general departments was divided and subdivided
until a proper classification of all the materials about to be exhibited
was secured.
To erect buildings suitable in character and capacity — buildings
illustrative of the taste, equal to the enterprise, and worthy of the
genius of the American people — was the next great duty devolved
upon the Centennial Commission. Here success was necessary. To
succeed was to elicit the admiration of every people; to fail was to
fail ingloriously. The reputation of the United States was at stake.
For the foremost men of all the world, the savants of Europe and
Asia — art critics, wits, and journalists; statesmen, poets, and philoso-
phers; admirers of the beautiful, keen-scented satirists, and dislikers
of republicanism out of every clime under heaven — were sure to gaze
upon and criticise whatever should be built in Fairmount Park, and
to carry abroad the story of our honor or our disgrace. Grand and
imposing structures would add to the dignity of the great occasion.
Mean and insignificant buildings would insure a mean and insignificant
exhibition, and that, in its turn, would produce among all nations a
contemptuous estimate of the American people and their institutions.
After much deliberation, the Centennial Commission determined
upon the erection of five principal buildings, the name and character
574 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of each to be determined by the nature of the materials therein to bt
displayed. The first of these, called the Main Building, was de-
signed with special reference to the exhibition of Products of the
Mine, Workmanship in the Metals, Manufactures in general, Edu-
cational and Scientific displays. The second building — called the
Memorial Hall, or Art Gallery — was planned for the exhibi-
tion of the Fine Arts in all their various branches and modifications
— Sculpture, Painting, Engraving, Lithography, Photography, Indus-
trial and Architectural Designs, Decorations, and Mosaics. The third
principal building was named Machinery Hall, and was designed
for the display of Machines of every pattern and purpose known to
man — Motors, Generators of Power, Pneumatic and Hydraulic Appa-
ratuses, Railway Enginery, and Contrivances for Aerial and Water
Transportation. The fourth edifice projected by the Commissioners
was called Agricultural Hall, and was planned for the exhibition
of all Tree and Forest Products, Fruits of every grade and descrip-
tion. Agricultural Products proper. Land and Marine Animals includ-
ing the Apparatus used in the Care and Culture of the same, Animal
and Vegetable Products, Textile Materials, Implements and Processes
peculiar to Agriculture, Farm Engineering, Tillage and General Man-
agement of Field, Forest, and Homestead. The fifth and last build-
ing, called Horticultural Hall, was designed for the proper dis-
play of Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, and Flowers — Hot-houses, Conserv-
atories, Graperies ; Tools, Accessories, Designs, Construction, and
Management of Gardens. Such was the general plan under which
the principal edifices of Fairmount Park were begun.
On the 4th of July, 1874, the foundations of Memorial Hall
were laid with appropriate ceremonies. In the following September,
Avork was begun on the Main Building, and was steadily carried for-
ward during the whole of the next year and until the beginning of
February, 1876, when the immense structure was completed. Machin-
ery Hall was built between the months of January and October, 1875.
On the 1st of May, in the same year, the foundations of Horticultural
Hall were laid, and the building was brought to completion April
1st, 1876. Agricultural Hall was not begun until September of 1875.
but the work was carried forward so rapidly that the edifice was com-
pleted by the middle of the following April. Meanwhile, the work
on the Government Building, the construction of wliich had
been provided for by the congressional act of March 3d, 1875, was
pressed to completion early in 1876. Moreover, it had become appar-
ent to the Commissioners that the space provided in Memorial Hail.
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 575'
would by no means accommodate the immense exhibition of Fine
Arts which was now confidently expected; and an Art Annex was
accordingly planned and built. It was also found from the rapidly
accumulating applications for space that the Main Building itself
would be filled to overflowing; and two Annexes — the principal one
for carriages and the other for the display of the Minerals of the
United States — were- accordingly added to that immense structure.
Other buildings — illustrative of various interests and enterprises
brought together from the ends of the earth — were rapidly planned
and constructed. A Woman's Pavilion, projected and carried to
completion by an organization called the Women's Centennial Exec-
utive Committee, was begun in the middle of October, 1875, and fin-
ished in the following January. The building was designed for the
special exhibition of whatever woman's skill, patience and genius
have produced, and are producing, in the way of handicraft, inven-
tion, decorations, letters, and art. Next came the several States and
Territories, selecting grounds and constructing a series of State
Buildings, commemorative of the spirit and illustrating the re-
sources of the respective commonwealths of the Union. Nearly all
the foreign nations participating in the Exposition made haste to
erect, for their own convenience and for the honor of native land,
elegant Governm-ent Buildings — French, Spanish, or British —
which became a kind of head-quarters and rendezvous for the sev-
eral nationalities. Then came model dwellings and Bazaars, School-
houses and Restaurants, Judges' Halls and model Factories, News-
paper Buildings and Ticket Offices, — until the Centennial grounds
(capacious as they were) were filled with — shall it be called a city? —
the most imposing, spacious, and ornate ever seen in the world. A
more complete description of some of those grand structures will here
be appropriate.
The first and largest of them all was the Main Building, situated
immediately east of the intersection of Belmont and Elm Avenues.
The edifice was in the form of a parallelogram, having a length from
east to west of eighteen hundred and eighty feet,* and a breadth
from north to south of four hundred and sixty-four feet. The build-
ing throughout its greater extent was one story high, the main cornice
being forty-five feet from the ground. The general height within was
seventy feet, rising to ninety feet under the principal arcades. From
each of the four corners of the building rose a rectangular tower
forty-eight feet square and seventy-five feet high. Over the central
* Eighteen hundred and seventy-six feet (the Centennial number) in the clear
576
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
portion of the main stmcture a
raised roof one hundred and ei^h-
ty-four feet square was likewise
surmounted at the corners by four
towers a hundred and twenty feet
in height. In the middle of the
two sides, looking north and south,
were the principal projections, four
hundred and sixteen feet in length.
The corresponding projections at
the ends were two hundred and
sixteen feet long, and extended,
the western in the direction of
Machinery Hall, and the eastern
towards the city. In these four
projections were placed the main
entrances to the building; that on
§ the east facing the carriage-ways
tJ to the city; the southern receiv-
^ ing passengers from the street-cars
g and the depot of the Pennsylvania
Railway; the western being rath-
er an exit to other parts of the
grounds than an entrance proper;
and the northern facing Memorial
Plall and the Schuylkill.
In the ground-plan of this
immense building a central nave
or avenue, a hundred and twenty
feet in Avidth, traversed the main
diameter to the distance of eight-
een hundred and thirty-two feet.
Parallel with this, two side aisles
a hundred feet wide, and of the
same length with the principal
nave, divided the spaces between
the same and the sides of the
building. These three main ave-
nues were intersected at right an-
gles by cross aisles forty-eight feet
in width, dividing the whole area
GB ANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
577
of the floor into blocks or squares, with sj^acious avenues entirely around
them. The principal nave and its parallel aisles were likewise inter-
sected by the main and two subordinate transepts, dividing the cen-
tral space of the ground-floor into nine great squares, free from
columnar support, and embracing an area of over a hundred and
seventy-three thousand square feet. The entire area of the ground-
floor was eight hundred and seventy-two thousand three hundred
and twenty square feet ; of the floors in the projections, thirty-
seven thousand three hundred and forty-four feet; of the tower floors,
twenty -six thousand three hundred and forty-four feet; — making an
aggregate area of nine hundred and thirty-six thousand and eight
square feet, or twenty-one and forty-seven hundredths acres ! The
ground-floor proper covered a space of a little more than twenty acres.*
The building was chiefly of iron and glass, and contained a mass
of material unprecedented in the history of architecture. The outer
walls were carried up in brick-work to the height of seven feet from
the foundations, which consisted of stone piers of the most substantial
masonry. Above the brick-work the panels between the columns of
support were occupied with glazed sash, sections of which were movable
for purposes of ventilation. The roof was of tin, laid solidly on boards
of pine; and the exterior ornaments — abounding on all the corners,
angles, and towers — were of galvanized iron. The columns of interior
support — numbering six hundred and seventy-two, and ranging from
twenty-three to one hundred and twenty-five feet in length — were
of rolled iron, and had an aggregate weight of two million two hun-
dred thousand pounds. The roof trusses and girders were of the same
material, and weighed about five million pounds. No less than seven
million feet of lumber were used in the construction of the building.
* A comparison of the leading Centennial buildings (in respect of dimensions) with
•other famous edifices may prove of interest.
Name of Structure.
Main Exposition Building,
Machinery Hall,
Agricultural Hall,
Memorial Hall,
Horticultural Hall, .
The Louvre (including the court),
St. Peter's,
The Capitol,
The Coliseum,
St. Paul's,
Cathedral of Milan, .
Tuileries,
Westminister,
St. Sophia,
-St. Stephen's,
!Notre Dame,
Area of Geound-Floou.
872,320 Square feet, 20.02 Acres.
558,440
a
u
12.82
(t
442,800
u
a
10.16
u
76,650
<(
ii
1.76
«
73,912
«
((
1.69
<(
309,888
11
((
7.11
a
273,927
ti
i(
6.28
((
261,348
n
((
6.00
a
245,340
a
t(
5.63
u
142,500
({
((
3.27
«
139,968
u
a
3.21
ti
108,864
a
ti
2.50
<i
103,733
«
u
2.38
ts
82,600
((
ti
1.89
i'.
81,420
((
i(
1.86
«
56,160
«
(I
1.27
K
0?8 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The water and drainage pipes — laid for the most part underneath the
floor — were four miles in length. Light — whether streaming through
acres of stained and fretted glass by day, or blazing from thousands
of gas-jets and burnished reflectors by night — was equally and abun-
dantly distributed. Hydrants — everywhere and ever full — promised
security against the destroyer.
Such were the principal features of the largest, if not the most
imposing, edifice in the world. The general effect, notwithstanding
the immense size of the building, was especially airy and pleasing.
Happy proportions and the regularity of irregularity reduced the
apparent dimensions of the mammoth pavilion till the vision was
nowhere oppressed with a sense of cumbrous outlines or heaviness
of structure. In practical adaptation to the purposes for which it
was designed, the building was all that could be desired ; and in its
effect upon that sense — call it by what name you will — which takes
cognizance of the sublime and beautiful, there was small room for
caviling and criticism. From the great towers and observatories,
rising grandly above the roof, the eye of the beholder, sweeping
around the horizon, drank in without fatigue the historic outline
of the surrounding country and the midsummer glories of Fair-
mount Park. Here wound the Schuylkill. Yonder was Laurel Hill,
where Elisha Kent Kane sleeps in an uninscribed grave on the rocky
hillside. No need of epitaphs for such as him! Farther on there
came a glimpse of Germantown, where through the fogs and deso-
lations of that forbidding October day-dawn a hundred years ago the
greatest man of all history, at the head of his ragged and half-starved
army, struggled against the foe. Here to the east, spreading awa.y
from the very feet of the beholder to the distant rolling Delaware^
and right and left to the skirts of the horizon, slumbered under the
summer sun the old City of Penn, where in those same heroic days,
now gliding dreamily into the shadows of the past, Adams and Jef-
ferson and Franklin did the bravest deed in the civil history of the
human race. Such were the thrilling associations which clustered
around the great Centennial Building. Only one melancholy reflec-
tion arose to trouble the soul of the beholder : the grand edifice was
designed only as a temporary structure — meant to subserve the fleeting
purposes of the International Exhibition.
The building second in importance, though not in size, among
the Centennial structures, was the Memorial Hall, or Art Gallery. It
stands upon a broad terrace in the Lansdowne Plateau, at the dis-
tance cf two hundred and fifty feet from the north projection of the
580 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Main Building, and a hundred and sixteen feet above the level of
the Schuylkill. The structure is of iron, granite, and glass, and is iu
that modern style of architecture called the Renaissance. The build-
ing is in the form of a rectangular parallelogram, and is three hun-
dred and sixty-five feet in length, two hundred and ten feet wide, and
fifty-nine feet in height above a twelve-foot basement of stone. The
dome, also rectangular in form, rises a hundred and fifty feet above
the terrace, and is surmounted with a colossal bell bearing a mag-
nificent statue of the goddess America, cast in zinc, twenty-three and
a half feet in height, and weighing six thousand pounds. At the four
corners of the base of the dome are seated other statues representing
the four cpiarters of the globe. The. floor of the main hall below has
an area of more than a half acre, and is capable of accommodating
eight thousand spectators at one time. In its architectural elements
the building embraces hints derived from many styles, some of which
— as, for instance, the arcades — date back as far as the villas of An-
cient Rome ; but the general effect is that of unity, elegance, and
grandeur.
The Centennial surroundings of Memorial Hall were appropriate
and striking. Before the main entrance and on either hand were sta-
tioned two colossal bronze pegasi curbed by the Muses. On the south-
west angle of the terrace a group of statuary, also in bronze, repre-
sented the firing of a mortar and the flight of the shell, watched by
the men of the battery ; while on the southeast angle a corresponding
group depicted a dying lioness, surrounded by her whelps and guarded
by her lord. Opposite the main entrances of the edifice the terrace
was ascended by flights of stone steps, spacious and grand ; and the
beholder, when for the first time he reached the plateau, found him-
self face to face with an edifice among the most novel and beautiful
in the New World. As he stood midway between the site of the Main
Building and Memorial Hall, he saw, on the one hand, a mammoth
structure designed for the exhibition of all things practical, utilitarian,
and profitable among the products of thought and application ; and,
on the other, a temple fit for the repose and revelation of all things
ideal, beautiful, and sublime among the trophies of human genius.
The Art Gallery was built at a cost of a million five hundred
thousand dollars. The funds for this purpose were the joint contri-
bution of Philadelphia and the State of Pennsylvania. The building
was designed as a permanent structure, affording for present time a
suitable gallery for the Fine Art display of the International Exhibi-
tion, and, in its final purpose, becoming a national memorial of the
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
581
Centennial year. After the close
of the Exposition, the edifice was
converted, according to the pur-
pose of its founders, into a recep-
tacle for the Pennsylvania Museum
of Industrial Art, — an institution
similar to that of South Kensing-
ton, in London. When the other
structures, many in purpose and
fashion, which the Centennial cel-
ebration had caused to spring up
in Fairmount Park, were struck
from their foundations — disappear-
ing even as they came, like an
exhalation of the night, — Memo-
rial Hall, with its higher purpose
and destiny, was happily preserved
for after ages as an enduring mon-
ument of the artistic taste and pa- g
triotism of the American people. *
In its general plan and out-
line Machinery Hall was similar to
the Main Exposition Building, and
only second thereto in dimensions.
The ground-plan was a rectangu-
lar parallelogram fourteen hun-
dred and two feet in length, and
three hundred and sixty feet in
width. On the so'uth side the cen-
tral transept of the main hall pro-
jected into an Annex, two hun-
dred and eight feet in depth by two
hundred and ten feet in breadth.
On the north the front of the prin-
cipal structure was on a right line
with the corresponding front of
the Main Building, and the two
edifices were separated by an inter-
vening space or promenade of only
five hundred and forty-two feet ;
6o that, glancing from the east end
582 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the Main Building to the western extreme of Machinery Hall,
the eye swept along an almost unbroken front line moi'e than seventy-
two hundredths of a mile in length ! The jn-incipal materials used in
the construction of Machinery Hall were iron and glass. The piers
of the foundation were of stone, and the supporting columns, for the
most part, of wood. The main cornice without was forty feet from the
ground, and the general height within was seventy feet. The build-
ing was painted in a pleasing tint of purplish blue, relieved by various
hues of contrasted colors. At the four corners and over the" main
side-entrances stood the towers, a hundred feet in height, breaking up
in some measure the otherwise monotonous outline of the building. In
the north-east tower was hung the famous chime of bells, thirteen in
number, weighing twenty-one thousand pounds, — many-tongued and
clamorous with the silver music which they flung out upon the air in
honor of the Old Thirteen States. Over the central gallery a royal
bald-eagle looked down upon the great clock which calmly marked
the hours of the Centennial summer.
Machinery Hall could hardly be called a thing of beauty : it
was too long and low for that; — but if adaptability to the purposes
for which it was designed be a criterion, the structure was by no means
wanting in taste. American civilization is the civilization of utility,
invention, and mechanism. The engine is the emblem, and Quce
Prosunt Omnibus the motto, over the doorway of our temple. On
the porches and architrave of what great structure might the em-
blem and the motto be more appropriately set than on the arches
of Machinery Hall ? For here Invention was queen, and Utility her
minister of state. Here was the realm where Thought had the mas-
tery over Matter — the empire of wheels and pistons, where Steam
was the Mother of Motion. — All this and more was -foreshadowed and
provided for in the grand structure designed by the Centennial Com-
mission for the display of machinery.
The fourth principal building of the Exposition grounds was Ag-
ricultural Hall, situated on the eastern side of Belmont Avenue, and
beyond the valley of the same name. The ground-plan of the edifice
presented a central nave eight hundred and twenty feet in length,
and one hundred and twenty-five feet wide. This principal aisle was
crossed at right angles by a main and two subordinate transepts — the
former one hundred feet, and the latter eighty fieet, in width. The
projections of these transepts formed two courts on either side of the
main structure, which, together with the four spaces similarly formed
at the corners of the buildlnci:, were enclosed with fronts and roofs, —
(583)
584 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
•whereby the edifice was extended into an immense parallelogram eight
hundred and twenty feet long, and five hundred and fi^rty feet in
width. The entire area thus embraced in the ground-floor was ten
and three-tenths acres.
As to its style, Agricultural Hall had a touch of Gothicism —
suggested by the Howe truss-arches of the nave and transepts — in its
construction. Over the bisection of the central avenue and the main
transept, rose an elegant cupola surmounted by a weather-vane. The
entrances were ornamental, and at each side were handsome turrets.
The roofs were pointed, stained a greenish tint, and flecked with sky-
lights. The body of the building was composed of wood, iron, and
glass, and was painted brown. The general eifect was pleasing, and a
bird's-eye view revealed in the edifice and its surroundings a pictur-
esqueness hardly discoverable in any other of the Exposition struct-
ures. This building, being devoted to the general purposes of an
agricultural display, had the necessary concomitant of yards for the-
exhibition of all the domestic fowls and animals. The entire cost of
Agricultural Hall was nearly two hundred and sixty thousand dollars..
The building was a temporary structure, and at the close of the Ex-
position was taken down and removed from the Park.
In the erection of Horticultural Hall — fifth and smallest of the
main Exhibition edifices — the Centennial committees displayed their
liking for the Moors. For the building is Arabesque in its archi-
tecture. The twelfth century furnishes the model, and the nineteenth
does the work. As to situation. Horticultural Hall stands on the
Lansdowne Terrace, north of the valley, overlooking the Schuylkill.
As to materials, — iron, glass, and wood. As to dimensions, — three
hundred and eighty-three feet long, one hundred and ninety-three
feet broad, and sixty-nine feet to the top of the lantern. As ta
cost, — three hundred thousand dollars. As to purpose, — a temple of
flowers. As to destiny, — a permanent ornament of Fairmount Park.
For the city of Philadelphia contributed the funds for the building,
and decided that it should stand in spite of the general demolition
and temple-crushing which prevailed at the close of the Exposition^
Next among the notable structures of the Exhibition grounds
Avas that building provided for by the Congressional act of March 3d,
1875, and called the United States Government Building. It stood
on Belmont Avenue, northward from Machinery Hall. The ground-
plan was a cross, with the main stem four hundred and eighty feet,
and the transept three hundred and forty feet, in length. In the cen-
tral part, the building was two stories in height. Over the bisection
(585j
■M6 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
of the nave and transept rose an octagonal dome, surmounted by a
flag-staft*. The edifice was elegantly painted, the prevailing color being
brown. The roof was black, the dome in imitation of wood, and all
the ceilings blue. The walls within were divided into panels, in each
of which was laid oif a diamond-shaped space containing in its center
an emblem representing some department or function of the Govern-
ment. The general effect of the building was that of airiness and
ease — hardly to have beeen expected in an edifice so strongly and
heavily built.
The AVoman's Pavilion, already mentioned, was located at the
western end of the Horticultural section of the grounds, and was one
of the most beautiful of the Centennial buildings. The structure was
of wood and glass. Here again the ground-plan M'as a cross, each of
the arms being a hundred and ninety-two feet long, and sixty-four
feet in width. The end of each transept was adorned with an elegant
porch ; and the spaces in the corners — formed by the four projections
of the building — were converted into four minor pavilions, and made
an integral part of the main hall. Within, there were in all only four
columns of support, the roof resting mainly upon the outside walls.
The whole interior was painted in delicate tints of blue, the color with-
out being gray. The central part of the building, surmounted by a
lantern bearing a cupola, rose to the height of ninety feet. The
ground-floor embraced an area of nearly seven-tenths of an acre.
The British Government Building, generally called " St. George's
House," stood on George's Hill, and was the head-quarters of the Brit-
ish commissioners. The edifice, embracing in the ground-plan an area
of twenty-two hundred and fifty square feet, was in the style of archi-
tecture prevalent in the times of Queen Elizabeth. The roof was com-
posed of red tiles; and the fixtures, furniture, and decorations were all
after models which were fashionable at the close of the sixteenth cen-
tury. The building, which was two stories high, was very handsome —
•even elegant — in its general appearance, recalling forcibly to mind the
most brilliant and romantic period in English history. St. George's
House was designed for the accommodation not only of the commis-
sioners from the home empire of Great Britain, but also for the use
and comfort of the agents from the British colonial possessions in
different parts of the world.
The Building of the French Government was located eastward
from Memorial Hall. The ground-plan was a parallelogram sixty feet
long by forty feet in M'idth. The structure Avas composed of brick, iron,
und glass, and in its general aspect was not unworthy to express the
588 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
interest felt by the authorities of the Third Republic in the American
Centennial. The building was designed to subserve the double pur-
pose of a home for the French Commission and of a hall for the dis-
play of models representing the public works of France.
The Building of the German Empire was an edifice still more
spacious and imposing. It was located east of Belmont Avenue, near
the head of the Lansdowne Valley. The structure was an imitation of
stone, in the style of the Renaissance. The area of the ground-plan
was thirty-four hundred and forty-four square feet, being a parallelo-
gram. The main portico and principal hall were very beautiful, and
the walls and ceilings were ornamented with frescos in the best style
of art. Here were the head-quarters of the Imperial German Commis-
sion, and here also was a suite of reception-rooms for the accommoda-
tion of strangers and visitors from the diiferent parts of Father-Land.
The single word "Espana" over the portal of an elegant frame
structure standing on George's Hill, told the beholder that he was at
the entrance to the Government Building of Spain. The edifice was of
wood, was two stories in height, and eighty by one hundred feet in dimen-
sions. As in the case of the other structures erected by foreign gov-
ernments, the Spanish Building was intended primarily for the accom-
modation of the Centennial Commissioners from Spain, and as a place
of assembly for Spaniards and their friends who may be present at
the Exposition. The secondary design was that of a suitable hall for
the display of models and drawings rej)resenting the more important
public works, fortifications, historical buildings, etc., of Spain.
The Kingdom of Sweden made a unique contribution to the Cen-
tennial grounds in the way of a Model School-house. The building
was constructed and furnished in Sweden according to the pattern
commonly employed in the better class of the national High Schools.
The structure was of native wood, unpaintcd, but brought to a high
degree of luster by skillful polishing. The furniture, apparatus, and
text-books displayed within, were excellent in their respective kinds ;
and the building in its entirety was fully worthy of the ten thousand
encomiums which were pronounced upon it.
As already mentioned the different States of the Union — except-
ing Maine, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Flor-
ida, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Kentucky, Minnesota, and Oregon
— erected buildings on the Centennial grounds, commemorative of
the history, public spirit, and resources of the respective common-
M^ealths. These structures varied greatly in their style, expensiveness,.
aiid proportions — according to the liberality or parsimony of the sev-
4
•o
•g
)>
*8
<
e
o
a;
590 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
eral State authorities. The buildings of New York, Xew Jersey^
Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Kansas were perhaps superior to any others
of this class in elegance of design and structure. Of similar sort
was the splendid Educational Hall of Pennsylvania, designed for the
display, by models and model-work, of all the methods and products
of education in the Keystone State.
Of private structures the grounds were full. There was a commo-
dious and valuable edifice situated at the intersection of the Agricul-
tural Avenue with that of the Republic, called the Department of
Public Comfort — a name significant of its design. An elegant build-
ing, devoted to the displays of the Singer Sewing Machine Company,
stood on the southern declivity of the Lansdowne Valley, north of
the Art Gallery. Southward froiii Machinery Hall a Shoe and
Leather Building had been erected, the design of which was to illus-
trate the various processes and products of that important branch of
manufacture. The Building of the Centennial Photographic Associa-
tion was located on the east side of Belmont Avenue, and was a spacious
edifice where all the processes of photography were illustrated. Sev-
eral of the leading newspapers of the country had buildings of limited
size, where their respective publications were advertised and offered
for sale. Then came the restaurants, cafes, and bazaars, varying in
their sort from common-place and mediocrity to a high degree of ele-
gance and luxury. — An extended description of structures of this
grade and fashion would hardly be appropriate in an abridged history
of the great Exhibition.
This account of the Exposition buildings can not be better con-
cluded than by a brief reference to the unexpected and extraordinary
part which the Empire of Japan had taken in the Centennial. The
Japanese buildings — two in number — though neither elaborate in their
style nor expensive in construction, were far more elegant, tasteful,
and commodious than had been anticipated. The Japanese Dwelling
stood on George's Hill, north of the Spanish Government Building;
and the oriental edifice ims the better of the tivo ! Spain, whose immor-
tal navigator of the fifteenth century "gave a New World to Castile
and Leon," did obeisance at the American Centennial to the dusky
Island Empire of the Far Pacific! The Bazaar of these progressive
foreigners was located near the Building of Public Comfort, and ex-
tended around three sides of a court. The edifice was of carved wood,
built without nails, low in elevation, covered with tiles. The grounds
were laid off in the style of a Japanese garden, and were surrounded
with a quaint fence of interwoven bamboo. These buildings, however,.
GRANT'S administration: 591
creditable as they were, by no means did justice to the enterprise and
wit of the men who had them in charge. The people of the Western
Nations have felt a keen surprise at the intelligence, public spirit, and
progress manifested by the Japanese at the Centennial Exhibition.
Such were the buildings erected for the great occasion. And the
time drew near when they were to fulfill their purpose. On the 5th
of January, 1876, the formal reception of articles for the Exposition
was begun. From that time forth the work of setting in proper array
the almost infinite variety of materials which came pouring in from
all quarters of the world, was pressed with the utmost expedition by
the Centennial Commissioners. A branch track of the Pennsylvania
Railway was laid to the very portals of the great halls, and every meas-
ure was adopted by the managers which could facilitate the delivery
and arrangement of the articles of display. Still, there were delays,,,
foreseen and unforeseen ; and it became apparent that a brief post-
ponement of the formal opening of the Exhibition would be neces-
sary. The anniversary of the battle of Lexington had been fixed upon
as a suitable time for the inaugural ceremonies ; but the work lagged,
and the Commissioners reluctantly changed the date of opening to the
10th of May, and of closing to the 10th of November.
Meanwhile, on the 13th of October, 1875, A System of Awards
had been adopted by the Centennial Commission. The members of
that body — availing themselves of past experience, and improving
upon the imperfect methods employed by the managers of the Inter-
national Expositions of Paris and Vienna — presented the following
General Scheme :
I. Awards shall be based upon Written Reports, attested by the
signatures of their authors.
II. Two hundred Judges shall be appointed to make such re-
ports, one-half of whom shall be foreigners, and one-half citizens of
the United States. They shall be selected for their known qualifica-
tions and character, and shall be experts in the departments to which
they shall be respectively assigned. The foreign members of this
body shall be appointed by the commissioners of each country, and
in conformity with the distribution and allotment to each, which will
be hereafter announced. The judges from the United States shall be
appointed by the Centennial Commission.
III. The sum of one thousand dollars will be paid to each com-
missioned judge, for personal expenses.
IV. Reports and awards shall be based upon Merit. The ele-
ments of merit shall be held to include considerations relating to
592 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
originality, invention, discovery, utility, quality, skill, workmanship,
fitness for the purposes intended, adaptation to public wants, economy,
and cost.
V. Each report shall be delivered to the Centennial Commission
as soon as completed, for final award and publication.
VI. Awards shall be finally decreed by the United States Cen-
tennial Commission, in compliance with the act of Congress, and
shall consist of a Diploma, with a uniform bronze Medal, and a spe-
cial Report of the judges on the subject of the award.
VII. Each exhibitor shall have the right to reproduce and pub-
lish the report awarded to him, but the United States Centennial
Commission reserves the right to publish and dispose of all reports
in the manner it thinks best for public information, and also to em-
body and distribute the reports as records of the Exhibition.
The day of opening came. Philadelphia was thronged with
strangers from all parts of the world. Every line of travel contrib-
uted its multitude. The morning of the 10th of May broke heavily
with clouds and rain. But patriotism made gloom impossible in the
Quaker City, and enthusiasm supplied the place of sunshine. A
thousand flags fluttered in every street, and more than ten times ten
thousand people, cheering as they went, pressed their way towards
Fairmount Park. A military escort, four thousand strong, conducted
the President of the United States to the Centennial grounds. For
it was he who should declare the formal opening of the Exposition.
The notables of many nations had already preceded him to the scene
of the ceremonies. The great open space — traversed by the Avenue
of the Republic — between the Main Building and Memorial Hall,
had been prepared for the inauguration. There had assembled the
Supreme Court of the United States, members of the Cabinet and
the American Congress, the governors of many of the States, distin-
guished officers of the army and navy, the ministers from foreign
countries, Dom Pedro II. of Brazil and his queen, illustrious civil-
ians, statesmen and diplomatists, noblemen with titles and greater
men without them,— -to witness the imposing pageant.
At the appointed hour the splendid orchestra, led by Theodore
Thomas, burst forth with the national airs of the various countries
participating in the Exhibition. Soon the President ascended the
platform and was seated, with the Brazilian Emperor and Empress
on his right. Then followed Wagner's celebrated Centennial Inaugu-
ration 3Iai'ch, composed for the occasion. Matthew Simpson, bishop
of the INIethodist Episcopal Church, then offered an eloquent and fer-
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
593
vent prajer, which was followed by the singing of John G. Whittier's
Centennial Hymn. When the strains had died away, the Honorable
John Welsh, chairman of the Board of Finance, arose and made a
formal presentation of the buildings and grounds to General Hawley,
president of the Centennial Commission. The latter, in an appropri-
ate manner, accepted the trust ; and then followed the singing of Sid-
ney Lanier's Centennial Cantata. General Hawley next delivered an
address, recounting briefly the things accomplished by the Centennial
Commission, and in the name thereof presenting to the President of
the United States the International Exhibition of 1876. The
President — most famous of all American chief-magistrates for oiot de-
INATJGUBAL CEREMONIES OF THE CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION.
livering orations— replied to General Hawley in the following well-
chosen address : —
" My Countrymen : It has been thought appropriate, upon this
Centennial occasion, to bring together in Philadelphia, for popular
inspection, specimens of our attainments in the Industrial and Fine
arts, and in literature, science, and philosophy, as well as in the great
business of agriculture and commerce. That we may the more thor-
oughly appreciate the excellencies and deficiencies of our achieve-
ments, and also give emphatic expression to our earnest desire to cul-
tivate the friendship of our fellow-members of this great family ot
nations, the enlightened agricultural, commercial, and manufacturing
people of the world have been invited to send hither corresponding
38
594 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
specimens of their skill to exhibit on equal terms, in friendly com-
petition with our own, — For so doing we render them our hearty
thanks.
" The beauty and utility of the contributions "will this day be
submitted t'> your inspection. We are glad to know that a view of
specimens of the skill of all nations will aiford you unalloyed pleas-
■-"re, as well as yield to you a valuable practical knowledge of so
many of the remarkable results of tiie wonderful skill existing in
enlightened communities.
" One hundred years ago our country was new, and but partially
settled. Our necessities have compelled us chiefly to expend our
means and time in felling forests, subduing prairies, building dwell-
ings, factories, ships, docks, Avarehouses, roads, canals, and machin-
ery. Most of our schools, churches, libraries, and asylums have been
established within a hundred years. Burdened with these great pri-
mal works of necessity, which could not be delayed, Me yet have done
what this Exhibition will shoM- in the direction of rivaling older and
more advanced nations in law, medicine, and theology ; in science^
literature, philosophy, and the fine arts. Whilst proud of what we
have done, we regret that we have not done more. Our achievements
have been great enough, however, to make it easy for our people to
acknowledge superior merit wherever found.
" And now, fellow-citizens, I hope a careful examination of what is
about to be exhibited to you will not only inspire you with a profound
respect for the skill and taste of our friends from other nations, but
also satisfy you with the attainments made by our own people dur-
ing the past one hundred years.. I invoke your generous cooperation
with the worthy Commissioners, to secure a brilliant success to this-
International Exhibition, and to make the stav of our forcifrn visit-
ors — to whom we extend a hearty welcome — botli profitable and
pleasant to them.
" I DECLARE THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIRITIOX NOW OPEN."
When the President's brief oration was concluded, the National
ensign was flung out as a signal from the great flag-staff of the jNIain
Building; the banners of foreign nations were immediately unfurled;,
cheers rent the air; a salute of a hundred guns from the battery on
George's Hill answered to the shout. Memorial Hall, the Main
Building, and Machinery Hall were now thrown open to receive the
procession of invited guests — four thousand in number, and first to
behold the handiwork of the nations. General Grant and Major
Alfred T. Goshorn, the able and indefatigable Director-General of
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
595
the Exhibition, led the way from the Main Building, and down the
great aisle of Machinery Hall to the center, where a special work had
been reserved for the President and the Brazilian Emperor. This
honorable duty was to open the valves of the mighty Corliss Engine,
whose tremendous pistons were to start into life and motion the in-
finite machinery of the hall. At twenty minutes past one o'clock, the.
signal was given by George
H. Corliss, the maker of the
iron giant. The President
and the Emperor, standing
upon the raised platform,
opened the valves ; the
ponderous fly-wheel started
on its tireless rounds, and
the multitudinous engines of
the hall began their varied
work. — The Centennial Ex-
hibition was fairly inaugu-
rated under the most auspi-
cious omens.
Such was the begin-
ning. Into the spacious
and beautiful park, into the
great buildings provided by
national wealth and patriot-
ism, had come the products
of all lands and the people of all climes. Never before in the his-
tory of the world had so many of the fruits of human genius been
brought together — never before had so rich a display of the handi-
work and skill of man been made. What, therefore, of the Exposi-
tion itself? How did it impress the imagination of the beholder?
How enlarge his faculties and increase his fund of knowledge? In
what way conduce to a higher standard of civilization? For that
was the object aimed at.
The first effect of the great Exposition upon the mind of the be-
holder was a sense of alarm and beioilderment at the extent of the dis-^
play. At the very beginning, he despaired of realizing the exhibition
on account of its vast proportions. On ascending from the valley of
the Schuylkill to the Lansdowne Plateau, a vision rose upon him pos-
sessing every element of intellectual interest, from the simple beauty of
the green sward and flower-gardens at his feet, to the stately magnifi-
ALFRED T. GOSHORN.
596 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
cence of the Main Building and the grandeur of Memorial Hall. Here
wound the long asphaltuni boulevards^ thronged^ but not crowded,
with ten thousand strangers. Beyond lay a landscape of sloping hill-
sides, lakes, forest, and fountains. The entire space, though a most
living picture, was noiseless, airy, and clean — a field of many colors,
fiill of sunshine, foliage, and flags. For the banners of all nations
.saved everywhere.
Entering under the eastern arches of the Main Building, the vis-
itor, rallying from his first surprises, began a work which he should
never accomplish — that of examining in detail the exhibits of the great
hall. From the gallery overhead floated down upon him the melodi-
ous and far-reaching harmonies of the mammoth Hastings organ with
its twentv-seven hundred pipes and its twelve hundred and eighty
square feet of front. Ascending to the gallery, the observer found
himself face to face with the splendid educational display of the State
of Massachusetts — best of its kind at the Exposition — embracing the
finest of the plans, models, and methods employed in the schools of
the Old Bay Commonwealth. Turning about and glancing to the
west, down the long avenues, the full vision of the Exhibition burst
upon him. There on the ground-floor lay the magnificent " courts,"
or hollow squares, into which the space had been divided — each of
these courts an exposition in itself. Afar to the right, where the
main transept ended in the north projection of the building, the gal-
lery was occuined with the great Roosevelt organ with its electric
echo and hydraulic engine. In the corresponding gallery, at the
south end of the transept, were the fine educational displays of Maine,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Jersey, Maryland,
Tennessee, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota,
and Iowa. In the gallery at the western end of the main avenue —
dimly seen at the distance of thirty-five hundredths of a mile — was
placed the exhibit of the American Society of Civil Engineers, the
display consisting of models, drawings, and photographs peculiar to
engineering art.
Descending to the main floor, the observer found himself in a
world of wonders. Near the eastern entrance was the fine exhibit
made by American stationers, and south of this the splendid book
display, representing the superb work done by all the great publish-
ing houses of the country. Further westward was the department
allotted to the Yale Lock Manufacturers for the exhibition of their
model post-offices. Next came the large section set apart for the dis-
play of American silks, woolens, and cotton goods — fabrics rivaling
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
597
the richest products of European and Oriental factories. And the
carpet pavilion — also American — with its patterns, delicate, novel,
luxurious, merited equal praise for the splendor of its treasures. Nor
did the cutlery of the United States, which was exhibited above the
Bections allotted to textile fabrics, suffer by comparison with the finest
corresponding products of British skill.
Among the southeastern squares Avas likewise set the display of
American pottery and porcelain. Near by stood a collection of gran-
ite monuments, and in the same vicinity a splendid exhibit of iron
and steel, chiefly from the furnaces and works of Pittsburgh. More
attractive still was the great display of American watches, made by
VIEW IN THE MAIN EXHIBITION BUILDING.
the Waltham Company of Massachusetts and the Elgin of Illinois.
Beyond the main aisle, to the north, bristled batteries of Gatling and
Parrott guns, and farther on were placed exhibits of safes from sev-
eral noted firms. The next sections were occupied with the beautiful
and costly displays of furnishing goods, costumes, etc., from the prin-
cipal merchants of New York and Philadelphia. Then came an ex-
hibit of vases, pedestals, and fountains, in terra cotta ; then the sec-
tions set apart for threads, cordage, and cables ; and south of these,
beyond the principal avenue, the massive display of the Centennial
Safe Deposit Company and the beautiful department of American
clocks.
On the line of the main aisle, between the eastern entrance and
598 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
the greater transept, were arranged the fine collections of cut an(7
ground glass, the best being from the works of Wheeling and Pitts-
burgh. In the adjacent sections stood the glittering show-eases of the
Meriden Britannia Company with their beautiful specimens of silver,
plated wares, and bronzes. But more magnificent still was the jew-
elers' pavilion — Moorish in its style — standing at the southeast angle
of the principal nave and transept. In this were displayed the almost
priceless treasures of the leading American jewelers — Starr and Mar-
cus, Caldwell of Philadelphia, and the Gorham Manufacturing Com-
pany of Providence. Among the articles exhibited by the latter was
the celebrated Century Vase, representing by its beautiful allego-
ries and emblems in raised silver the progress of America from bar-
barism to renown. Here also were the matchless show-cases of Tiffany,
starlit with diamonds, and blazing w^ith all manner of precious stones.
It was here, moreover, that the observer found the best view over-
head; for at this point, by the bisection of the principal nave and
transept, abundant room was afforded above for the display of art.
Each of the four sides of the vaulted space was occupied with an
immense allegorical painting. That on the east represented America,
Avith Washington and Franklin for its central figures. The piece em-
blematical of Europe stood opposite, with Charlemagne and Shake-
speare as its typical heroes. Asia was represented at the south curve
of the transept by a group of figures and emblems, with Confucius
-and Mohammed in the midst; while in the north division was set the
painting of Africa, Rameses II. and Sesostris occupying the center.
In the section south and east of the jewelers' pavilion were
placed the exhibits of ores, paints, and chemicals. The display of
printing-inks was made near by; and further to the east stood the
perfume-fountains with their jets of cologne and halos of fragrant
mist. Still eastward were set the cases containing the exhibit of phil-
osophical and surgical instruments ; and in the same vicinity, to the
south, were the sections allotted to furniture, much of which was of
the richest woods and most elaborate finish known to that branch of
art. And before the observer had finished his examination of these
superb apartments — for here the courts were fitted up after the man-
ner of a suite of rooms — his ear was saluted with strains of music,
and turning about, he found himself face to face with the finest dis-
play of piano-fortes ever made in the world. All of the great makers
had here done their best, under the stimulus of the sharpest compe-
tition— Stein way, Chickering, Decker, Stock, Knabe, Weber, — each
with his claims of peculiar excellence, and each anxious for the su-
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. ''■>99
preme award.— So ended a ramble through the seven acres of space
apportioned on the ground-floor of the Main Building to the exhibits
of the United States.
But the Saxon's Island Empire, mother of English liberty, was
also there with her arts and industries. Over the northwest angle
of the main aisle and transept hung the Red banner of Lancaster,
bearino- the words " Great Britain and Ireland." There were
the courts apportioned to the British commission. In the first of
these was placed the celebrated exhibit of the Elkingtons, silver-
smiths of Birmingham. Their collection embraced several pieces
worthy to rank among the highest products of human skill and pa-
tience. The work was mostly in the new style of art called Be^ouss^
—the process of developing figures in relief upon metallic surfaces by
hammering. Here stood THE Helicon Vase with its infinite stories
^rom the legends of Greece. Here hung the Milton Shield, beai-
incr upon its ample disc the sublime visions of Paradise Lost^ Here
a ^reat number of less valuable works in silver and bronze gave ex-
tent and variety to one of the richest collections in the whole Exhi-
bition.
Nearer to the northern projection of the Main Building were
placed the British porcelains and potteries, embracing some of the
iinest specimens of ceramic art. Farther northward was the display
of ornamental iron-work, and to the west an extensive exhibit of
tiles. Next came the department of British furniture, rivaling that
of the United States in the elaborate and sumptuous character of its
specimens. Near by, the pavilion of the Royal School of Art and
Needlework attracted a constant throng of visitors. For the queen
herself and the members of her family were the makers of those splen-
did embroideries. Farther to the west was the magnificent display of
the British carpet-dealers. Then came the exhibit of fire-arms, cut-
lery philosophical instruments, stained glass, jewelry— chiefly Scot-
tish—and then the superb collection of cotton and woolen goods,
Irish poplins, cloths, silks, and laces, with which the section was
filled along the main avenue.
The British Colonies had emulated the zeal of the mother-coun-
try The Canadian exhibit was of the highest order. The educa-
tional system of Ontario was fully and meritoriously displayed by
'^ It Nvas a matter of oft-repeated inquiry among the visitors at the Centennial, why
these superb specimens of workmanship exhibited by the Elkingtons as well as the
Tiffany Bryavt Fas. and the Gorham Century Fase, were not transferred to Memorial
Hall, along with other works of art in no respect superior.
600 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
models, plans, and drawings illustrative of the methods and work of
the public schools. The geological department was enriched with a
full collection of ores, especially plumbago, coal, and granite. The
Canadian Indians had sent a large contribution of peltry, bead-work,
and apparel ; and this display was contrasted with the richer and more
extensive exhibit of furs made by the Company of Hudson Bay. In
another section specimens of furniture from the shops of Quebec and
Toronto gave token of tastefully furnished homes in the Dominion.
Models of Canadian vessels showed commercial enterprise ; cotton
and woolen goods told of extensive factories ; sewing-machines and
pianos repeated the music of the Northern household.
Far Australia had also remembered the jubilee of Independence.
The flocks on her hill-sides had contributed their magnificent fleeces
to surprise the Western nations. The Argonauts of the South Pacific
were home ao-ain with the richest of treasures ! Here stood an obe-
lisk of phantom gold, showing in cubic inches the quantity of real
gold taken from the mines of New South Wales since 1851, Here
were bars of New Zealand tin and blocks of coal ; sections of beau-
tiful timber and cocoons of silk; ores of antimony and copper; na-
tive wines and heaps of precious stones. Excellent photographs of
Australian cities and scenery added much to the interest of the ex-
hibit.
British India had also contributed specimens of her arts and
industries. Photographs of her dusky people — oldest of the Aryan
races — whose ancestors and our ancestors, in the far hill-country of
Bactria, abode together, watching the same flocks, gazing at the same
stars, and dreaming the same dream of destiny in the ages agone, —
and photographs of Hindu homes as well, made the display of special
interest. India carpets, gems from Bombay, and Delhi embroidery
added brilliancy to the exhibit. Here, too, were jeweled weapons,,
native pottery, and precious stones ; shawls and laces ; silks and wool-
ens; cereals and cotton from the banks of the Indus.
The colony of New Zealand was chiefly represented by paintings
and drawings. But an important display of copper ores, lead, and
coal Avas also made. The section of the Cape of Good Hope wa&
occupied with a collection of native wines and brandies; gems and
weapons ; costumes and ores ; and specimens illustrating the natural
history of the country. Gold-dust, skins of animals, idols, ornaments^
and weapons composed the display from the Gold Coast. Jamaica
sent her rums and sugars, native woods and hemp. Tasmania had
also come with an exhibit of zoological and mineral specimens. Tlie
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 601
Bahamas, Bermudas, Trinidad, and Guiana were represented by their
various products, ranging from shells and corals to sugars, tobacco,
and manufactures.
La Belle France — for the third time a republic ! After a hun-
dred years the land of LaFayette had come to do homage at the
shrine Avhich his blood had helped to consecrate. The space allotted
to the French Commission was located between the main aisle and
the north wall of the building, east of the central transept. The
section of chief importance was that containing the exhibit of porce-
lains, rivaling in beauty and excellence the choicest work of the East.
In glassware, too, the French display was of the highest order. The
superb mirrors and chandeliers, exhibited by Brocard of Paris, were
a delight to thousands who thronged around them. The section set
apart for the display of bronzes and antiques was also crowded with
admiring multitudes. Here stood an elegant mantel-piece of black
marble, fifteen feet in height, exquisitely embellished with statues
and reliefs ; and here were grouped artistic cabinets, quaint figures,
and articles in gilt.
Another department of great beauty was that in which were ex-
hibited the treasures of French fashion — laces, gloves, silks, velvets,
satins, and costumes. In this dazzling court Lyons and Paris were
rivals. Near by was a second department of apparel, where courtly
wax-figures, dressed to the excess of magnificence, did obeisance to
other figures in splendid shawls and laces. Further on, stood the
pavilion of the book publishers of France ; and opposite to this was
the court of engravings. The walls of the booksellers' pavilion were
hung with the most elegant tapestries ; and many of the publica-
tions displayed within were in the highest style of art. North of
these sections, was the department of French vehicles — a unique col-
lection, ranging from the quaint Cynofere, or dog-car, to carriages,
of state.
In the matter of personal ornaments and articles of household
economy, the French exhibit was of great excellence. The display
of the Paris jewelers was exceptional in its beauty and tastefulness.
Of mantel ornaments there was an almost infinite variety, ranging
from little ivory sprites and phantoms in ebony to elaborate clocks
and bronzes. Of musical instruments — violins, flutes, cornets, music-
boxes, and mimic birds — the exhibit was elegant after its kind. But
the French pianos and organs were hardly comparable with the mag-
nificent instruments displayed by the United States. In the depart-
ment of cutlery a fine collection was presented, but the display was
■602 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
inferior to the corresponding exhibit made by Great Britain. The
■comparison turned the other way, hoAvever, in the sectio.n of plate
^lass ; for in that department the French specimens were peerless.*
West of the central transept and south of the principal aisle were
the sections allotted to the German Empire. Across the avenue, di-
rectly opposite the American jewelers' pavilion, was placed the mag-
nificent exhibit of the Royal Factory of Berlin. Here stood an im-
posing crescent-shaped case, with black columns at either end, bearing
upon their summits the golden eagles of empire — the empire of Cffisar
and Charlemagne restored in HohenzoUern. In this case were dis-
played the German porcelains, next to the French in excellence and
beauty. Here were plates, busts, and statuettes, elaborate in design
xind intensely national in every part. Here were the three superb
■emblematical pieces called the Germania, the Aurora, and the
Otho Vases — queenly rivals of the splendid works of the Elkingtons,
Tiffany, and Gorham. Further to the west was the section of plate
^lass; then the exhibit of the German jewelers; and then the court
of armory, where were displayed the uniforms, accouterments, and
weapons of the German soldiery, from the Crusading times to the
present. Next came a section filled with toys from Niirnberg, and
next the displays of Elberfeld silks and Saxon hosiery. On the
southern aisle the objects of chief interest were the ivories exhibited
by Meyer of Hamburg, the woven wire goods of Dresden, the gold
and silver leaf exhibit of Bavaria, and the perfumes of Cologne.
Nearer to the southern wall was the display of the German chem-
ists. Then came the Leipsic lamps and lanterns, and then the Lin-
■den pavilion of velvets.
The southwest section of the German department was occupied
with what musical instruments soever are played upon in Fatherland.
But here again, as in the department of France, the inadequacy of
the pianos and organs to compete with the instruments of the United
States was plainly apparent. Along the southern wall was placed
iin interesting collection of articles illustrating the appliances and
* The manufacture of American plate glass is yet in its incipiency, and is beset with
siKoial difficulties. Chief among the embarrassments which have attended the enter-
prise is tlie want of adequate protection, and the inveterate determination of foreign
•establishments to prevent the success of such manufacture in tlie United States. Never-
theless, it is known to the author that but for the serious misfortune of breaking the
finest plnte in piicking, the Honorable W. C. De Pauw, president of the Star Glass
"Works of Now AUmny, Indiana, would have contributed to the E.xposition specimens
of liis work fairly rivaling the best of the French exhibit. Tiie largest of the De Pauw
collection was a magnificent plate having a superficial area of 21,095 square inches.
GRANT'S ADMINISTBATIOK 603
methods of a German army hospital. Near by was the exhibit of
the Schwartzwold clock-makers — a quaint and beautiful collection.
Models of the Hamburg steamships were found in the southeastern
sections, and, finally, the elegant pavilion of the German booksellers
— best of the kind from Europe.
A description of the departments of the leading Western nations
and of the exhibits made thereby, is in some measure a description
of the rest. True, the beholder as he wandered from court to court
was ever impressed with the multifarious aspects of human life and
the ever-varying phases of civilization. Still, so far as the displays
made by the different branches of the Aryan race were concerned,
there was unity in variety — a generic similarity with specific modifi-
cations. As to the Oriental nations, there was a wider departure
from the common type, but a noticeable similarity of features among
their own displays. The thoughtful observer rarely failed to find in
the various courts an exhibit typical of a known civilization, but he
also found more than that. Thus, for instance, the Austrian sections
presented the expected treasures of Bohemian cut-glass ; of amber-
work and meerschaums; of pipes ad infinitum; of Viennese porte-
monnaies, diaries, and albums ; and the ^mexpected treasures of tlie
silk-weavers of the Danube. Also in the Italian court were found
the anticipated reproductions of ancient art ; trophies commemorative
of the Italian Radicals from Columbus to Garibaldi ; the religious
balo over every thing ; and the w/mnticipated display of Venetian
pottery. The Belgian section presented the finest of Brussels linens,
laces, and tapestries ; and, as if in contrast with these, an elaborate
display of fire-arms and an illuminated advertisement of the min-
eral waters of Spa. Holland made an exhibit of what things soever
the Netherlander prizes — from dikes to pipe-stems, from magnificent
bridges to humble roofs of thatch. Nor had the conquerors of the
North Sea forgotten the refinements of letters ; for the Dutch book-
sellers' pavilion was among the finest at the Exposition.
Here stood the cuckoo clocks of Switzerland. Geneva, city of
political philosophy and quaint watches, was present with all her arts.
The embroidered lace curtains of St. Gall hung tastefully over pho-
tographs of the Alpine glens, and the Swiss pavilion of education
stood near by. Sweden contributed a court of exceptional elegance,
well filled with the products of her arts and industries. The chief
attractions of the display were the specimens of Bessemer steel and
cutlery, Swedish arms and armor, woolens and silks, safety-matches
and pottery. Norway presented her glassware from Christiana. An-
604 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
cient weapons were placed in contrast with a modern Norwegian
school-house, and old coins and medals with modern jewels and sil-
verware.
Among the sections of chief interest were the courts of Den-
mark, Egypt, and Spain. These were set contiguous, fronting the
main aisle, and representing in their style and contents three diverse
types of civilization. The articles most attractive in the Danish court
were terra cotta ornaments, silverware from Copenhagen, Esquimau
apparel, and a rich collection of furs. Across the entrance-M^ay to
the Egyptian court was this inscription : " Egypt — Soudan — the
OLDEST PEOPLE OF THE WORLD SENDS ITS MORNING GREETING TO
THE YOUNGEST NATION." Entering, the visitor was confronted Avitli
a bust of Rameses the Great and a model of the Pyramid of Gireh.
Then came a gorgeous display of the caparisons and gold-studded,
harness of the steeds of the modern Pharaohs; then cabinets of
ebony, costly and quaint ; and then an exhibit of Arabic books and
manuscripts. The court of Spain was richly hung with Spanish tro-
phies and curtains of velvet. AVithin were the portraits of those dar-
ing adventurers, Cortez, De Leon, De Soto, and Pizarro. The articles
displayed were typical of the country and people. Scarfs and shawls,
silks and woolens, porcelain tiles and glassware, chemicals and fire-
arms, were the chief products exhibited.
Opposite the departments allotted to Sweden stood the court of
Japan. The contents surpassed description. The display of bronzes
attracted universal attention and universal praise. The porcelains
were, beyond comparison, the finest of the whole Exposition — finest
in quality and in the immense variety of the exhibit. Richness of
coloring — vivid hues of scarlet, green, and gold — prevailed every-
where. Lacquered ware of every variety, superb cabinets, and silken
screens embroidered w'ith figures infinite, curious faces, and Japanese
costumes, made up a display which astonished the Western mind with
the profusion of Eastern art.
China did not half so well — yet well. About the whole display
were the anticipated characteristics of overdone conservatism. Here
was the expected array of drawings without perspective and designs,
consisting wholly of color. Here was a pagoda painted in fantastic
hues, and here that China ware — a rich profusion of plates and vases —
for which the Celestial empire has had immemorial fame. Here, too,
were the beautiful silks, and cloths with gold embroidery, and elab-
orate bedsteads carved with dragons' heads, and woven forms unnam-
able iu tapestry and screen. The polite and impassive man of the
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 605
almond eyes and cue — manager of the exhibit — walked among the
trophies of his civilization and did reverence before a wooden image
of Fo.
The Russian court was placed between the sections of Spain and
Austria. An iron statue of the inspired barbarian, Peter the Great,
stood like a grim sentinel to guard the treasures of his empire. Mucli
fine silverware, of excellent design and workmanship, was displayed
as the exhibit of Moscow. A magnificent piece in Repousse, called
The Adoration of the Magi, elicited universal praise. St. Peters-
burg had sent a similar collection, and also a imique group of bronzes
illustrative of the life and manners of the Russian peasants. Another
section contained a superb chandelier, together with statuettes, cas-
kets, cabinets, and mantels. The exhibit of Russian furs was unsur-
passed ; and the display of embroidered cloths, velvets, and silks was
well calculated to excite the jealousy of more favored lands.
The section of Portup-al was found in the rear of the court of
Egypt. Glassware, porcelain, and pottery constituted a large part of
the exhibit. The life, costumes, and manners of the Portuguese peas-
antry were here represented by groups of statuary in plaster. The
Azores made a beautiful display of phantom ships and floM-er-baskets
woven of the fiber of the fig-tree. Along the south wall of the sec-
tion was placed a fine collection of geological and topographical maps
and charts illustrating the physical aspect of Portugal. The exhibit
of raw silk, cotton goods, blankets, and embroidery, was exceptionally
good.
Of the African kingdoms — after Egypt — the best and only dis-
plays were made by the Orange Free State and Tunis. The court
of the latter was located in the rear of the sections of Denmark and
Turkey, and was almost exclusively occupied with the personal ex-
hibit made by the Dey. The collection consisted of articles illustra-
tive of the manners and customs of the Bedouins, and of antiquities
from the ruins of Carthage. The court of the Orange Free State
occupied the southwestern angle of the building, and was wholly
devoted to the governmental exhibit made by the authorities of that
country. An unexpected array of minerals, native woods, ivory,
grains, mohair, and wool, composed the chief part of the collection.
But the cases containing the wealth of the feathery races of South-
eastern Africa, from the infinitesimal humming-birds of Madagascar
to the straggling descendants of the dinornis, were of >,till greater
interest and beauty.
No department in the Main Building was more admired and
606 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
praised than the court of Brazil. Dom Pedro and his queen had > f>
cause of shame in the presence of their national exhibit. The Bra-
zilian pavilion was located between the courts of the Netherlands and
Belgium, and was characterized throughout by elegant magnificence
of structure and contents. At the entrance was a brilliant display of
flowers and designs delicately woven from the plumage of Brazilian
birds. Topographical maps and photographs illustrated the physical
aspect of the country; while the splendid display of tropical woods,
together with the finest of coffees, yams, ginger, and rice, revealed
the true riches of the empire.
The minor South American States were also fairly represented.
The pavilion of Peru was tastefully ornamented ; the contents, of
value and interest. Gold, silver, cinnabar, cojjpcr, iron, and lead,
were the principal minerals exhibited; coffee, pepper, cinnamon, co-
coa, caoutchouc, and cinchona, the chief vegetable products. The
court of Chili was of similar sort, and contained some fine specimens
of silk and worsted-work; but the most interesting part was the case
filled with the stuffed skins of Chilian wild animals. The exhibit of
the Argentine Confederation was chiefly of ores — gold, silver, copper,
and lead. The display also embraced fine specimens of building-
stone, quartz, and plumbago. The manufactures were, for the most
part, of leather; and handicraft was mainly illustrated in a collection
of native weapons. — Far Hawaii, also, had a pavilion of considerable
interest, containing a collection of birds, shells, and sea-weed ; fans,
ferns, and feather-work.
Mexico, with her pseudo-Latin civilization and anarchic repub-
licanism, had pitched her court next to that of the United States.
The pavilion was Aztec in its style, with hints of a more modern
date. The exhibit was principally historic, consisting of antiquities
and remains. The display of manufiictures embraced some fine silks
and elegant leather goods. Here were effigies of Mexican cavaliers,
formidable as Quixote in armor. Here were native wines and me-
dicinal plants, and here a fine collection of ores — silver, galena, and
iron. But the exhibit in its entirety was neither striking nor ex-
tensive.
In the Carriage Annex the observer found much to instruct and
amuse. For here were the ridiculous vehicles which the fathers made
their journeys in — old Virginia or Concord coaches, heavy enough
for a fortification. But here, in contrast, was the full triumph of
modern art in the combination of the ornate and the useful. All
things elegant and luxurious of silver-palace car or private carriage
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
607
studded with gold, and all things prosy of spokes and hubs and har-
ness, were here displayed in profusion. Here again Brazil, compet-
ing with Pullman and Woodruff, presented a splendid coach from
the Rio Janeiro Railway. Here Canadian sleighs and sledges were
contrasted with the diminutive coaches of Italy and the substantial
vehicles of Old England. — And so the rambler, passing under the
western arches of the Main Building, found himself in the open air,
facing the Bartholdi Fountain.
The way across the beautiful esplanade led to Machinery Hall,.
INTERIOR VIEW OF MACHINERY HALL.
Entering at the southeastern portal of that great edifice, the observer
came at once into the department of the German Empire. Immedi-
ately before him stood the famous Krupp guns, gigantic twelve hun-
dred pounders, black and terrible as the Miltonic artillery. Several
rifled cannon of smaller caliber were set in contrast; and just across
the aisle was a pyramid of iron-ore, showing the material out of which
the great guns were cast. On the opposite side of the battery was
exhibited a brick-making machine from Berlin. Near the southeast-
ern angle of the building, the Gas Motor Factory of Deutz displayed
a peculiar engine in which the piston is propelled by the explosion
of gas. The best steam-engines exhibited in the German section were
from the works of Leipsic.
608 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The department of France embraced the northeastern division of
the ground-floor. Near the entrance thereto was placed an elegant
pavilion in wliicli were illustrated the processes of working in brass
and copper. The confectioners' section, where bon-bons were made
and sold, came next, and then the department of Parisian soaps and
cosmetics. In tliis part also stood the silk-looms of Lyons, and fur-
ther to the north a set of machines illustrating the processes of li-
thography. An apparatus for the manufacture of beet-sugar was also
exhibited, and an ice-making machine from Paris. The rest of the
French contrivances had respect, for the most part, to fashionable
wants and the avocations of polite society.
Further westward was placed the section of Belgium. Chaudron
of Brussels led the exhibit with an effective and tremendous machine
for boring wells.* Car-wheels and axles from Louvain, a trip-ham-
mer and steam shears from Marcinelle, and models of machinery for
the manufacture of stcarine, were the next attractive features of the
display. A splendid exhibit of wool-carding apparatus was presented
as the contribution of Verviers ; and the city of Ghent added a superb
horizontal engine, built for the mint at Brussels.
The Northern nations had contributed little in the way of ma-
chinery : Denmark nothing at all. Sweden made a small but respect-
able display in the way of trip-hammers, stationary engines, one small
locomotive, a fire-engine, and several sewing-machines. The con-
tribution of Norway consisted of some odd-looking machinery for
working in wood and metal. The Russian display was almost wholly
of artillery — partly good, partly indifferent in its quality. In the same
vicinity was the fine exhibit made by Brazil, consisting of models of
dry docks and men-of-war; military and naval enginery; arms, ac-
couterments, and munitions ; stationary, locomotive, and fire-engines ;
pumps, jiin-making apparatus, and machinery employed in the Impe-
rial mint.
The best of the exhibits made by foreign nations was that of
Great Britain. Two of the Rochester traction-engines, standing near
the eastern entrance to the hall, were much wondered at and praised.
So, also, the fine carding-machine just opposite. Manchester made a
fine display of steam hammers, circular saws, and enginery of coinage
and stamping dies. The armor-plate exhibited here was the best ever
produced, ranging from nine inches to twenty-two inches in thickness,
* It is clear that, in respect to machined for upland excavation, the Americans have
much to learn. That whole line of contrivance, beginning with the plow and endine
with the dredging-machine, is subject to great and radical improvements.
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 609
Keemingiy impenetrable. The Applebys of London exhibited two of
their tremendous cranes — giants after their kind. English sewing-
machines — mostly of the hand-power pattern — were plentifully dis-
played. In the sections near by, the spinning and winding of cotton
thread was illustrated, and further on, the delicate looms for weaving
silken badges were in operation. Gadd of Manchester exhibited a:
engine capable of printing calicoes in eight colors at one impression.
An effective system of railway switching and signaling was shown by
Brierly and Reynolds of London. In an adjoining square stood a
fine model of an Inman steamship, and east of this a Walter printing-
press in operation. Farther on, Tait and Watson of London displayed
a collection of machines, including a sugar-mill, a valveless engine,
and centrifugal drying-pans. — Across the aisle was the exhibit of Can-
ada, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia, — embracing turbine wheels, a
set of railway signals, quartz-mills from Halifax, Toronto marbles,
fire-engines, sewing-machines, and Indian canoes.
Of the American department — three-fourths of the whole in ex-
tent— the greatest trophy was the Corliss vertical engine, standing in
the middle of the central aisle. The platform was fifty-six feet in
diameter; the stroke of the piston, ten feet; the weight of the fly-
wdieel, a hundred and twelve thousand pounds. It required twenty
tubular boilers of large capacity to furnish the proper amount of
steam. The periphery of the fly-wheel was geared w^ith cogs into the
underground line of shafting, and the power applied was equivalent
to that of fourteen hundred horses; but the movements of the great
engine were smooth and noiseless.
From the central station, the observer, glancing down the south
transept, had a full view of the Hydraulic Annex. Here pumps of
every grade and fashion were pouring their torrents into a vast tank
having a capacity of sixty-three thousand cubic feet of water. An
interesting display of steel ware was made in a section near by, and
further on, an exhibit of metal piano-frames by the Steinways. Here
the process of making nails and tacks was illustrated, and there a
machine was cutting corks. On this hand was an extensive collec-
tion of files and screws, and on that a pyramid of grindstones. Far-
ther on, to the west, was an exhibit of rolled iron, and next, a large
display of axles and machinists' tools. A huge brick-making ma-
chine, capable of moulding four thousand bricks in an hour, was fairly
matched with a mammoth planing machine, weighing a hundred and
sixty-two thousand pounds, and having a traverse of forty-four feet.
In an adjacent section, paper envelopes were made by an automatic
.S9
610 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
apparatus at the rate of a hundred and twenty per minute. Worces-
ter, Massachusetts, contributed a collection of edged tools, dies, and
presses; and Paterson, New Jersey, a machine for spinning silk. On
the central aisle model steamers, men-of-war, yachts, and life-boats
were exhibited. Next came the sections occupied with Hoe and Bul-
lock printing-presses; then the book-binding, stereotyping, and elec-
trotyping display, and then the splendid roller-drum book-press of
Cottrell and Babcock, New York. A type-writer stood near by, and
farther on was a section where all the steam- and sailing-vessels owned
in the ports of Massachusetts -were exhibited by models.
In the department of confections the American display rivaled
chat of France. Close to the bon-bon section w^ere placed some fine
wheat-cleaning and centrifugal sugar-drying apparatuses. Then came
an old Virginia tobacco factory, where all the processes of making
were exhibited. And the colored people, as they wrought, made the
hall resound with the w'cird plantation melodies of the Southland.
Farther east the manufacture of India-rubber shoes of all sorts and
sizes was illustrated by the actual processes of the art. Then came
the glass-blowers' exhibit, and then an excellent display of wall-
paper by the Howells of Philadelphia. A collection of washing- and
wringing-machines caught the attention for a moment, and then the
observer found himself before the huge sugar-refining apparatus ex-
hibited by the Colwell Iron Works of New York. The Wharton
automatic switch was exhibited near by, and then came a splendid
display of common and platform scales. Mining machinery was
shown by the Dickinson Company of Scranton, and American loco-
motives— unsurpassed by any in the world — by the Baldwin Works
and the Pennsylvania Railway. In the adjacent section the Westing-
house air-brake and the Henderson hydraulic-brake were exhibited
in sharp competition. The Backus Avater-motor here attracted much
attention, as did also an odd hydraulic-ram near the western entrance.
The department of American power-looms — rivaling those of the best
European factories — was constantly thronged with visitors, and the
section where Waltham watches were made was a similar scene of
eager interest. The Pyramid Pin Company of New Haven exhibited
a quaint little machine for sticking pins in papers. A powerful hy-
draulic cotton-press was shown by the Taylor Iron Works of Charles-
ton, and a magnificent collection of wire ropes and cables by the
Roeblings of Trenton.
The display of railway bars — iron and steel — was, for the most
part, made by the works of Pittsburgh. Among the western sections
GEANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 611
of the hall some fine ditching and draining enginery was exhibited;
and near by was the display of American knitting-machines. Of sew-
ing-machines the exhibit was unrivaled. The competition reminded
the observer of that among the piano-fortes in the Main Building.
Every form of patent, from the original Howe to the most recent in-
novation, was duly praised by its group of advocates and admirers.
The American Steamship Company exhibited their vessels by models,
and eastward from their section stood a handsome pavilion contain-
ing an unlimited assortment of saws. The department of fire-engines
and extinguishers was adjacent ; and near by, the famous Weimar
blowing-engine and an apparatus for charging blast-furnaces were
displayed.
Many relics of old machinery were exhibited in various parts of
the hall. Chief of these antiquated contrivances was a section of the
FIRST STEAM-ENGINE ever used in the United States, — an odd piece
of mechanism of the Cornish pattern, which was brought to America
in 1753 and set in operation in a copper-mine near Newark, New
Jersey. The first saw-maker's anvil, imported in 1819, was exhibited
near by. In another section were several pieces of excellent work-
manship from the mechanical department of Cornell University. An
automatic shingle-machine, having a working capacity of twenty-five
thousand shingles per day, was an attractive object in an adjoining
division ; and in the same space the work of dovetailing, moulding,
carving, and paneling by machinery was illustrated. Then came the
work of barrel-making, shown by the actual processes; then an ex-
hibit of scroll-saws in operation ; then blast-furnaces by models, steam
drills, gas apparatus of every variety, and a machine for crushing an-
thracite coal. — Taken all in all, the exhibit of American machinery
was the finest display of the kind ever made by man.
On his way from the western entrance of Machinery Hall to the
Government Building of the United States, the observer would hardly
fail to pause and admire the Roman Catholic Total Abstinence Fount-
ain, one of the most beautiful of the outdoor works of Fairmount Park.
Thence a brief walk northward on Belmont Avenue brought him to
the edifice erected by Congress for the exhibition of the functions of
the American Government in times of peace, and its resources in war.
The building itself has already been described. Without, to the east,
stood a model monitor, having the same dimensions and appearance
as the original. In the same vicinity a huge Rodman twenty-inch
gun and others hardly less formidable were exhibited. On the south,
also, many pieces of heavy artillery were displayed, together with shot.
612 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
shells, and projectiles of various kinds. Here, too, were the boats
Faith and Advance, used by De Haven and Kane in their Arctic
voyages. Near by, two postal cars, for the fast-mail service of the
United States, were exhibited by the Post-office Department. On the
north, the War Department made a display of pontoons, bridge trains,
and army wagons. Within, the south division of the principal tran-
sept was occupied with the Centennial Post-office. Here the mails
were regularly received and distributed with systematic precision. The
sul)ordinate sections of this department were named respectively the
divisions of Topography, of Books and Blanks, of Mail Equipment,
and of Stamps. In the last section a machine of unimaginable inge-
nuity was displayed, having an automatic capacity to cut, fold, gum,
stamp, count, and pack, the Government envelopes.
Another large display in the Government Building was made
under the auspices of the Agricultural Bureau. The subordinate di-
visions of this exhibit were of Statistics, Chemistry, Botany, Micros-
copy, Entomology, and Horticulture. In the first named of these
sections were large outline maps of the United States, showing the
areas of forest- and farming-lands, the various products and capaci-
ties of soils, the distribution of animals, etc. In the department of
chemistry was a fine and well-arranged exhibit of the earths, together
with illustrations of the processes of growth, fermentation, distilla-
tion, and the like, as well as the methods of manufacturing vegetable
])rodacts. In the botanical division the various M'oods of the United
States were exhaustively exhibited. The collection was very exten-
sive and valuable, embracing sections of nearly every species of wood
growing between Central America and Canada, and from Passama-
quoddy to the Golden Gate. The microscopic section was occupied
with a series of charts and drawings illustrative of vegetable diseases.
The entomological division was chiefly devoted to an exhibit of insect-
eating birds and of what creatures soever prey upon the farmer's fruits
and grains. In the horticultural section a display w^as made of those
plants which have an economic and commercial value, such as corn,
tobacco, cotton, and flax.
The exhibit made by the Department of the Interior was com-
posed chiefly of the well-known treasures of the Patent Office and the
National Museum at Washington. In addition to these, special dis-
plays were made by the Land and Indian offices, and by the Bureaus
of Education and Pensions. Here, also, was exhibited a complete set
of the census reports from 1790 to 1870, inclusive. But surpassing
all in interest and value was the magnificent exhibit made by the
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
613
Smithsonian Institution. This extraordinary display embraced, first
of all, a classified collection of the animals of America. These ani-
mals were grouped according to the relation which they bear to man,
as useful or injurious; and the exhibit included all those contrivances
and implements which man employs in capturing them when wild, or
subjecting and controlling them when domesticated. The collection
illustrative of the fishery resources of the United States was equally
complete and full of interest. In the department of American eth-
nology an extensive exhibit was made of aboriginal implements and
contrivances peculiar to the primitive modes of life. The last branch
INTERIOR VIEW OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT BUILDING.
©f the Smithsonian contribution was that illustrating the mineral re-
sources of the United States — a collection of great extent and value.
The first section under the auspices of the Treasury Department
was devoted to the exhibition of the money, money-making, and med-
als of the national mint. The special display, made by the Light-
house Board, of lanterns, reflectors, sea-signals, and electrical and
calcium lights, fairly rivaled the great exhibit of similar apparatus
made in the government building of France. The whole collection
was of the highest order, and gave token that no branch of humani-
tarian science is making more rapid strides than that which apper-
tains to the perfection of light-houses and the safety of mariners.
The Navy Department made an exhibit of torpedoes, and of the
614 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
methods of using them in naval warfare. The collection embraced all
of the patterns of that terrible engine, from the original as invented
by Fulton, to the more modern forms produced by Ericsson and Lay.
Another section was devoted to marine arms and armor, shot, shells,
munitions, uniforms, and what weaponry soever is peculiar to men-
of-war. The Naval Observatory exhibited — besides its own publica-
tions— a fine collection of photographs and chronometers. Here, too,
were found most of the precious relics of the Arctic explorations, from
the voyage of De Haven to that of Hall.
The exhibit made by the War Department was still larger and
more complete. In this division was arranged the splendid display
of the Signal Service under direction of General Albert J. Merer,
chief signal officer of the army. Here were exhibited all of the del-
icate instruments and tentative apparatus peculiar to the half- formed
science of meteorology ; and here the methods of observing and re-
cording the multiform and many times capricious phenomena of earth,
air, and sky, were fully illustrated. The Engineering Corps also con-
tributed an interesting exhibit, chiefly composed of maps and draw-
ings illustrative of the coast, lake, and river improvements of the
United States during the past century. The section of the Ordnance
Service was devoted to the display of fire-arm manufacture as the
same is carried on at the Government Armory at Springfield, Massa-
chusetts. The making of cartridges was also fully illustrated by the
actual processes. Next came the exhibits made by the Post Hospital
and the Laboratory — full of interest after their kind — and, last of all,
the model light-house standing at the northeast angle of the building,
without, and not far off the tremendous fog-horn called the Siren.
In the extensive exhibits of Agricultural Hall — varied and full
of interest, as they were — there was, of course, a less display of hu-
man skill and a greater revelation of the beneficence of nature. For
here the products exhibited wert, for the most part, the offspring of
the ground — the fruits of air, water, and sunshine. In this vast hall,
the agency of man extended but little further than the modification and
utilization of the gratuitous riches of the world. The display, there-
fore, was in a large measure limited to tne collection and exhibition
of things uncommon and prodigious. — A brief summary of the objects
of principal interest in the various departments of the hall may here
guffice.
The products of the United States occupied more space than did
those of all other nations combined. And the general superiority of
American exhibits over those of foreio;n lands was noticeable from the
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 615
first. In the northeastern division of the hall were placed the sec-
tions of agricultural implements, plows being a specialty. The ex-
hibit made by Speer and Sons of Pittsburgh, as well as that by Oliver
Ames and Sons of North Easton, Massachusetts, was specially varied
and excellent. In a section to the north were shown rakes and
threshers of the most approved patents, and in the same collection a
specimen of Foust's hay-lifting machine, which called forth many
commendations. Near by stood the superb plows manufactured by
the Oliver Chilled-Plow Company of South Bend, Indiana.* Far-
ther on was another collection, by the Higganum Plow Company of
Connecticut; and then came a section of gang-plows, exhibited by
Collins and Company of New York.
In the department of reapers and mowers all the great makers
were fully represented. The Sweepstakes, Harvester, McCormick,
Champion, and Buckeye machines were specially conspicuous in the
exhibit. The Union Corn Planter, from the shops of Peoria, Illi-
nois, attracted much attention, and the superb Westinghouse steam-
thresher was greatly praised. An excellent reaper, called the Planet,
was shown by the Wayne Agricultural Works of Richmond, Indiana.
Slosser's self-loading excavator — a powerful ditch-digging machine —
etood close by; and near the eastern entrance was exhibited one of
the well-known Adams Power Cornshellers.
Grain-drills next attracted attention, especially the display made
by the Farmers' Friend Company of Dayton, Ohio. In the south end
of the central transept several excellent cider-mills were exhibited in
operation — that of Boomer and Boschert leading the collection. Farm
.scales were shown by the Howe Manufacturing Company, and farm
saw-mills by Harbert and Raymond of Philadelphia. In this vicin-
ity two models of stables — one of wood, and the other of iron — were
exhibited, and also some fine horse-powers from Racine, Wisconsin.
The observer next found himself in other scenes, amid the Amer-
ican wine-growers' exhibit, near the northern entrance. The Califor-
nia display was first in excellence and extent. After the vintage of
the Pacific Slope came the fine exhibits of Ohio, Missouri, and New
York. South of the wine collection, at the bisection of the nave and
transept, stood a large bronze fountain, throwing high its cooling
Avaters ; and at the four angles round about was set the display of
canned fruits and meats, hops, malts, and spices. Here, too, was a
* One plow exhibited by this firm was perliaps the finest ever made. Tlie metallic
])arts were plated with uickei, and the rosewood frame was splendidly embossed with
agricultural emblems.
616
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
gplen^lid exhibit of starches, chief of which was the fine perfumed
starch manufactured by Erkenbrecher of Cincinnati. Here, more-
over, the appetite of whatsoever creatures live by bread was provoked
by the bountiful display of that article. Close by, in the middle of
the avenue, stood a huge windmill, purposely old-fashioned, thirty
feet in height, dated 1776. Next came the zoological exhibit, com-
posed of stuifed animals and birds, but more especially of a magnifi-
cent museum of plaster casts prepared by Professor Henry A. Ward
©f Rochester University. Along the western wall of the building all
INTERIOR VIEW OF AOKK ri.Tl'RAL HALL.
varieties of edible fishes, out of the fresh and salt waters of the United
States, were exhibited alive in a series of aquaria.
The northwestern courts of the building were occupied with the
tobacconists' pavilions. The display was very extensive, embracing
every variety and caprice of manufacture. North of the tobacco sec-
tion the Delta Moss Company of New Orleans exhibited a tree bear-
ing a rich array of Southern moss ; and the prepared product was
shown in bales near by. A huge evaporator for drying fruits, and a
massive road-roller driven by steam, next caught the attention ; and
then came the sections set apart for the general display of the woods,
grains, vegetables, and fruits of the various States — perhaps the larg-
est and most imposing collection of such articles ever brought to-
gether. In the court of New Hampshire were exhibited, along with
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 617
other wonders, two enormous swine, stuffed, stupid, and prodigious
as nature and taxidermy could make them. Farther on was the fish
and fishery exhibit of Massachusetts, and farther still, the silk-worm
display of California. South of the central transept the rich soils of
Iowa were exhibited in large glass cylinders ; and beyond was placed
a fine collection of the minerals of Nevada. — Such were the objects
of chief interest in the departments allotted to the United States.
The exhibit of Great Britain occupied the southeast division of
the hall. First of all, the display of condiments was equal to the
expectancy of the most accomplished epicure. Equally commendable
were the exhibits of preserved meats, patent coffees and teas, prepara-
tions of milk, sugar, and the like, presented by the Colonial Produce
Company of London. An adjoining section contained a full assort-
ment of the famous English ales ; and farther south was placed the
department of British agricultural machinery, embracing some fine
road-wagons, portable engines, and the smaller implements peculiar
to field, orchard, and garden. Last of all came a display of mill-
stones, tiles, and ornaments in terra cotta.
The Canadian section, in the southwest quarter of the hall, was
well filled with interesting products. And the exhibit was specially
well arranged. The front line of cases was occupied with an exten-
sive display of root vegetables, pulse, and cereals. In the next line,
secondary products, such as wool, feathers, and pelts, were shown ;
and in the third tier of cases, prepared animal and vegetable mate-
rials— cured fish, flour, salt, pickles, and cheese — were displayed. Of
agricultural implements the list was varied and extensive. Plows,
rivaling the best of the American collection, were exhibited by Spar-
die of Stratford, Ontario, and by Ross of Chatham. Fine threshing-
machines, adjustable platform reapers, and turnip-drills of superior
pattern, were the other objects of chief interest in the collection. —
British Columbia, also, made a creditable display of her products,
consisting chiefly of wheat and oats, woods, barks, and woolen goods
of Indian manufacture.
France displayed her vintage. The exhibit was complete, em-
bracing the whole list of vinous liquors from claret to brandy. In
the same section were shown the unrivaled chocolates manufactured
by Menier ami Company of Paris. Vilmorin and Andrieux of the
same city exhibited the products of their famous flower-gardens; and
Strasbourg displayed her preserved fruits, sardines, and condiments.
The process of manufacturing mineral waters was illustrated by Ga-
zaubon of Paris, and near by was shown the method of bottling wine.
618 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Millstones, crucibles, cements, and artificial stone, were displayed in
another department ; and last of all, the fine cocoons and raw silks
for which Southern France is so justly celebrated.
Along the south wall of the building was arranged the exhibit
of the German Empire. Here, again, the display of wines was pre-
eminent. The vintage of the Rhine elicited most praise. Nor did
Gambrinus the king look down displeased from the florid labels of
the Bavarian and Prussian beer-mugs. The exhibit of smoking- and
chewing-tobacco was next in extent and importance ; after that, the
display of confections. Then came a palm-tree with the mowing
scythes of Wurtemberg for its branches ; then specimens of curled
hair out of the shops of Frankfort, and then some beautiful tufts of
wool from the sheepcotes of Silesia.
The products of Austria and Hungary were displayed together.
The cereals of the different parts of the empire were well exhibited.
Vienna sent a fine collection of canned fruits, Pesth her boxes of
nuts, and Prague her offering of wine and raisins. Flax, and wool,
and hemp, were the staples of the Hungarian section, and leather of
the exhibit of Bohemia.
On the south side of the central transept lay the court of Russia.
And the display was unexpectedly complete and well arranged. Th«
strictly agricultural element predominated throughout the whole ex-
hibit, only a small space being devoted to wines and liquors. Wheat,
oats, rye, and barley — all of the finest quality — constituted the majot
part of the display, and gave token of abundant wealth in the al-
most sunless fields of the Muscovite. The fiber-producing plants, of
many and superior kinds, were shown ; and excellent candied fruits
and confections — the contribution of Poland — completed one of the
most interesting divisions of the hall.
Among the best of the exhibits made by the Southern nations,
was that of Spain, located on the south side of the central transept,
adjoining the Russian court. Here, again, the true agricultural idea
was maintained, and the wine and liquor exhibit given a secondary
rank. The display of Spanish cereals, fruits, pulse, and nuts, was set
in glass-encased panels, around the sides of the court, presenting a
fair summary of the field and garden products of the kingdom. The
exhibit of wools was among the finest of the Exposition, and the col-
lection of wines admirable after its kind. Specimens of the gum- and
resin-bearing trees of the Philippine Islands were exhibited in an
adjoining section ; and near by, Havana displayed her cigars and
chocolates. The space allotted to Portugal was well filled with her
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 619
products, the exhibit being similar to that of Spain, and equally
meritorious.
The Italian court occupied the southeast division of the hall.
The collection embraced specimens of all those products for which
the peninsula has been immemorially famous. Here were grains, and
fruits, and nuts; olive-oil and raisins; oranges, figs, and lemons;
citrons, pomegranates, and liquorice; and wine— such as the Latin
-wits and poets quaffed when Britain belonged to the Druids.
The court of the Netherlands joined that of Austria on the south.
The Dutch display was arranged with much skill and tastefulness ;
and neither Gambrinus nor the grape was the be-all and the end-all
of the exhibit. But the collection was as intensely national as those
of Germany. The products were mostly shown under the auspices
of the Giilderland and Zealand agricultural societies. The various
sections presented a full array of grains, plants, and pulse, as well as
the more valuable woods, especially those used in the manufacture
of dyes. Fine specimens of the famous Holland cheese and flour
were shown, and in the sections to the west an assortment of choc-
olates and cod-liver oil. The Dutch fishing interests were also well
illustrated with tackles, seines, and boats. The beet-sugar makers of
Arnhem made a fine display of their product, as did also the mann-
iiicturers of those peculiar pungent beers, gins, and heavy liquors,
-which are so popular in Holland.
In the court of Norway the section of greatest interest was that
oontaining the exhibit of her fisheries. The collection of fishing ves-
sels and apparatus was extensive and complete. Cured specimens of
nearly all the fishes known in the Norwegian marts were included in
the display. The space devoted to agricultural implements contained
some rude but characteristic machines and tools from the fields and
shops of the North. But the display of leather was excellent, and
that of the waterfowl of Norway especially interesting. — Similar in
sort Avere the exhibits made by Sweden and Denmark.
In the Japanese court the principal product displayed was tea —
a large and varied collection. Here, again, the fishing interest was
Avell represented, nets and tackle being a specialty. Then came illus-
trations of the silk culture, by the actual processes, from the worm to
the web. The woods of Japan were displayed to good advantage as
were also the grains and vegetables of the empire. — No exhibit of their
agricultural resources was made by the other nations of the East.
Among the South American States, Brazil here — as elsewhere —
was preeminent. Before the Brazilian court stood a much admired
620 HISroRY OF THE UNITED STATES.
rustic pavilion so flecked on post and rafter with tufts of fleecy cotton
as to look like the greatcoat of St. Nicholas. Within was the coifee
exhibit — a full and complete display of the leading industry of the
empire. Leaf-tobacco was also shown, and near by was an unsur-
passed collection of the tropical woods for which Brazil is famous.
In a section farther on were exhibited fine Brazilian sugars, rivaling
those of Cuba and the United States. Last of all came the display of
the silk interest of Brazil, beginning with the mild-mannered worm
peculiar to that country, and ending with the finished fabric. — Vene-
zuela and the Argentine Republic also made small but interesting ex-
hibits of their resources, ranging from feathers, waxes, and native
gums to leather- work, silk, and liquors. Here, too, Liberia made a
display of her resources and industries.
Entering the Mauresque doorways of the Horticultural Building,
the rambler stopped to admire the Foley Fountain in the center of
the hall. Around him was the luxuriance of the tropics. Fragrance
bathed the air, and silence sat like a plumed but songless bird on
all the motionless leaves of this green world of wonders. Here was
the great central conservatory, filled with the choicest plants and
richest flowers culled out of every clime where sunshine and air are
woven into leaf and petal. Here were the date-tree and the palm,
fern, and cactus, lemon shrub and banana — a wilderness of blossoms-
and fruits, cool and silent as the bowers visited in dreams.
Alone: the sides of the main conservatory were the green-houses
for the propagation of plants. The floors were sunk ten feet below
the level of the main hall, and the aisle in each was a hundred feet
in length. Passing up and down these avenues, the observer found
on either side an indescribable array of whatever the hand of nature
has done of quaint or beautiful in moss, or fern, or flower. No ex-
tended account will here be attempted of the variety and beauty of this,
the kingdom of the plants. — The collections of Horticultural Hall were
the floral offcrino; of the United States — a wreath for the altar of Inde-
pendence. But the leaves of the garland were gathered from all climes.
No structure of Fairmount Park was more characteristic of the
epoch than the Woman's Pavilion. The building and its contents-
illustrated one of the grandest tendencies of American civilization —
the complete emanci])ation of woman. In ancient times her chains
were forged; the ^[iddle Age re-riveted them upon her; the Modern
Era — even the Reformatian — has mocked her with the .semblance and
the show of liberty. America sets her free and lifts her to the seat of
honor.
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
621
The collections of the Pavilion were rich and varied. The
southeast division was set apart for the display of woman's inven-
tions. The contrivances were mostly of such sort as appertain tc
domestic economy and the improvement of home. Now and then,
however, some capricious apparatus of fashion, invented in the realm
■of whim, attracted the gaze of the curious. Photographs of such
benevolent institutions as are under the conduct of women formed an
interesting exhibit, as did also the worsted and silk embroideries
which were displayed in an adjoining court. The art collection em-
braced some creditable — even excellent — specimens of drawing, a fair
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INTERIOR VIEW (IF HORTICUI.TU R AL HALL.
display of p;;intiiigs, ,and several commendable pieces of statuary.
In the center of the hall was an elegant printing office, where The
J^eiv Century for Women was published and distributed during the
Exposition.
The southwestern quarter was occupied by foreign exhibitors.
Here, too, the display of woman's work was varied and of a high or-
der of merit. The royal ladies of the Old World had contributed
much to the excellence and interest of the exhibit. Queen Victorians
School of Art and Needlework made some splendid offerings of em-
broidery. Many contributions of similar sort were presented by the
women of France, Sweden, and Canada. Egypt had its section of
artistic designs in gold and silver thread- work; even the queen of
Tunis had heard of Independence and sent some superb gold-em-
broidered velvets as a token of her good will. The Japanese exhibit
622 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
was composed for the most part of silken screens, writing desks, and
cabinets, delicately ornamented after the style of the country. The
Brazilian women, also, had honored the pavilion with some beautiful
specimens of gold lace, shell \vork, and silk and worsted embroideries.
But it was among the art treasures of Memorial Hall that the
stranger in Fairmount Park tarried longest : and then came again
and again. For the variety was wellnigh infinite — the pageant ever
new. Here were the bright ideals which flit for a moment across the
vision of genius, and in that moment are made immortal. Here was
a scene where the human imagination had transfused itself into the
radiant imagery of the canvas and the imperishable forms of marble.
Here, for a season, the scales fell from the sordid eyes of Utility,
and the gaze was lifted up in the serener air of the True and the
Beautiful.
In the arrangement of the exhibits in the Art Gallery, Italy was
given the preference. The main hall, before the southern entrance,
was set apart for her treasures. Here the best of the Italian sculp-
tors were represented by their works. Caroni of Florence exhibited
his Afrieaine and several other fine pieces of statuary. The Boy
Franklin from the studio of Zocchi and Washington and his Hatchet
from that of Romanetti attested how much American legends are
loved in Italy; and a colossal bust by Gaurnerio of Milan showed the
heroic estimate placed upon the Father of his Country in that land.
The humorous in art was well represented in The Forced Prayer by
the same noted artist. The Milanese sculptor, Baroaglio, was repre-
sented by several fine pieces, chief of which was a colossal statue
called Flying Time. Hardly less attractive were the Berenice by
Peduzzi, and Sunshine and Storm by Popatti. The Florentine Torclli
presented Eva St. Clair as a specimen of his work ; and Ropi of
Milan contributed a bust of Garibaldi. TJie Night of October Wfli
was the name of a piece by D'Amore, illustrating the discovery of
Guanahani; while a number of child-statues were shown as the work
of the Milanese sculptor Pereda. A Miltonic Lucifer from the studio
of Corti was a work of the highest order of merit, as was also the
beautiful Madonna by Romanelli. A Psyche by Pagani attracted
much attention; and a Bacchu^ by Braga was greatly praised.
Of Italian paintings — mostly copies from the famous productions
of the old masters — the collection was large and attractive. One of
the finest of the exhibit was Galileo before the Inquisition, after Ra-
phael. The original pictures, mostly of the Penaissance, were of va-
rious degrees of merit, the Columbus in Chains by Fumigalli deserving
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
623
special praise. — Nor must mention be omitted of the famous Cas-
tellani Museum of Antiquities, which was exhibited in the northeast-
ern quarter of the hall — a display unsurpassed in interest by any other
of the whole Exposition. The exhibit embraced one of the rarest,
most valuable, and best classified collections of ancient and mediseval
gems, classic busts, and personal ornaments, now in existence. The
museum was under the care of Professor Castellani himself, and the
section was the especial haunt of scholars and antiquaries.
The American exhibit in Memorial Hall was divided between the
ROTUNDA OF MEMORIAL HALL.
main edifice and the annex. The collection was very extensive, em-
bracing several thousand works in painting and statuary. The chief
display of paintings was made in the great north corridor of the main
hall. Here were exhibited a vast number of pieces, ranging from
second-class and mediocrity to the highest productions of genius. The
eastern end of the corridor was wholly occupied with Rothermel's
immense painting of The Battle of Gettysburg. Page's Farragut in
Mobile Bay was also exhibited as a historic sketch ; and as an alle-
gorical work, Thorpe's Westimrd the Star of Empire takes its Way was
shown. Here, also, were exhibited six of Bierstadt's famous land-
scapes— <5plendid scenes from the Pacific coast. Then came a num-
624 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
berless array of portraits, landscapes, sketches, and ideal works, hv
well-known American artists and new aspirants for fame, amono-
whose productions, though furnishing abundant room for comment
and criticism, it would be invidious, within this narrow limit, to dis-
criminate.
Of American statuary, also, a large exhibit was made — chiefly in
the central hall. Under the dome was set a fine group in terra cotta,
being the allegory of America from the Albert Memorial in Hyde
Park, London. Not far off stood Connelly's Thetis with the Inj'ant
Achilles, much and justly admired. Story's Medea gave proof of that
artist's genius ; and Margaret Foley's Cleopatra was a work of great
beauty. Several busts of Americans by Americans, attested the skill
of the artists, especially that of Charles Sumner by Preston Powers.
In the northwest corridor was exhibited The Dying Cleopatra — a work
of remarkable beauty and power — by Edmonia Lewis, the colored
sculjitress.
Too much praise could hardly be bestowed upon the British col-
lection of paintings. It was generally conceded that the exhibit, both
in the merit of the works themselves and in the admirable grouping
which had been effected by the managers, was the best of the Ex-
position. If any doubt existed as to whether the first artists had
coutributed their choicest works to the American collection, no such
doubt existed in respect to the genius of England. For here was
The Battle of Naseby by Sir John Gilbert; a Summer Moon by Fred-
erick Leighton ; The Raihray Station by Powell ; Armitage's Julian
the Apostate; Sir Edwin Landseer's Lions and Marriage of Grisclda;
Maclise's Banquet Scene in Macbeth; Sir Thomas Lawrence's Three
Partners of the House of Baring ; William Powell Frith's Marriage
of the Prince of Wales; West's Death of Wolfe; and a vast number of
landscapes, sketches, portraits, drawings, water-colors, pencilings and
crayon-work — making a collection so complete and meritorious as to
awaken the pride of every Briton.
The art department of France was hardly representative of the
genius of that country. Still, the collection embraced many pieces
deserving of high praise. Among the best was Rizpah protecting the
Bodies of her Sons, by George Becker ; The Conspiracy of the Medici,
by Louis Adan ; and The Death of Caesar, by Clement. Hillemacher's
Napoleon I. vrith Goethe and Wieland, and Yiger's Josephine in 1814,
were notable pieces of portraiture. Leda and the Swan, by Jules
Saintin, and The First Step in Crime, by Pierre Antigua, received
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. 625
many commendations, and Duran's exquisite portrait of Mademoi-
selle Croixette of the Theatre Fran9ais was universally praised.
In the German collection the most striking picture was StefFeck's
CrcMon Prince in the Front of Battle. Louis Braun and Count Harras
each contributed a Surrender of Sedan — striking sketches of that his-
toric event. The Arrest of Luther, likewise by Harras, was a picture
of great merit, as was also Elizabeth signing the Death Warrant of Mary
Stuart, by Julius Schrader. In the way of humorous pictures. After
the Church Festival was exhibited by Ferdinand Meyer, and the Village
Gossips by Meyer of Bremen. Nor should mention be omitted of
The Flight of Frederick V. from Prague, by Faber du Tour — one of
the best historic pieces in Memorial Hall. Another work of the
same sort, and almost equally meritorious, was Briicke's Discovery of
America. Last of all — exhibited in a separate corridor — was Wag-
ner's great painting, A Scene in the Circus Maximus at Rome. In the
way of portraits, that of Pauline Lucca by Begas, and of George Ban-
croft by Gustave Richter, were worthy of special praise.
In the eastern gallery was placed the collection of Austria. Here
was John Makart's magnificent picture, entitled Venice Paying Horn--
age to Catharine Cornai-o — a historic study of great interest. As speci-
mens of figure-painting Ernest Lafitte contributed a Girl of Upper
Austria, and Aloysius Schonn a Siesta of an Oriental Woman. Of
similar sort were the two fine pictures. A Page and A Girl with Fruit,
by Canon of Vienna — works in imitation of Rembrandt. Friedlan-
der was represented in the collection by Tasting the Wine, and Miiller
by an English Garden at Palermo. — Several fine pieces of statuary
were shown as a part of the Austrian exhibit. The principal of these
were the busts of Francis Joseph, Maximilian I., and Charles V. To
this collection also belonged The Freedman, by Pezzicar^-a bronze
statue emblematical of the emancipation of the slaves by Lincoln.
In the Spanish department The Landing of Columbus was the sub-
ject of two paintings — the first by Gisbert, and the second by Puebla.
Here also was shown a Christ on the Cross by Murillo. Columbus
before the Monks of La Rabida was the title of a large and striking
work by Gano. But the painting most esteemed in the Spanish ex-
hibit was a superb production called The Burial of St. Lorenzo, by
Alejo Vera of Rome. — The Portuguese painters and sculptors were
not represented in the collections of the hall.
The Northern nations — Sweden, Norway, Denmark — made a
creditable showing of their art. The Swedish collection was arr
40 • ■
626 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
ranged along the eastern wall of the western gallery, and was com-
posed of several fine and some commonplace productions. One of
the best was Tlie Burning of the Royal Palace at Stockholm — a paint-
ing by Hockert. Then came The Winter Day, The First Snow, and
The Poor People^s Burying Ground, by Baron Hermelin, the Swedish
art commissioner at the Exposition. A fine work called Dark Mo-
ments was exhibited by Baron Cederstrom, and Sigurd Ring by Se-
verin Nilsson. Several other legends of the Vikings were represented
in the works of Winge, exhibited near by ; while a Market Day in
Dilsseldorf illustrated the genius of August Jernberg. — The Norwe-
gian collection was made up of two fine pieces by Professor Gude ;
one excellent picture entitled A Scene in Romsdalsfiord, by Norman ;
The Hardengerjiord, from the studio of Thurman ; and several pro-
ductions of less conspicuous merit. — The Danish group embraced The
Discovery of Greenland in A. D. 1000, by Rasmussen ; Two Greenland
Pilots, by the same artist; and A Midsummer Night under Iceland's
Rough Weather, by Wilhelm Melby.
The Belgian pictures constituted a notable collection. Here, first
of all, was Autumn on the Meuse, by Asselberg — a work of great ex-
cellence ; as was, also, Rome from the Tiber, by Bossuet. De Keyser's
Dante and the Young Girls of Florence attracted much admiration.
Then came The Sentinel at the Gate of the Harem, by St. Cyr; Sunday
at the Convent, by Meerts ; Xavier Mellery's Woman of the Roman
Campagna; Mols's Dome of the Invalides ; Smits's War; Stallaert's
Cave of Diomede; and After the Rain, by Van Luppen. The Desde-
mona of Van Kiersbilck, and The Deception by Jean Portaels, were
works deserving the highest praise.
Next in interest Avas the art exhibit of the Netherlands. Nor
did the collection in its entirety suffer by comparison with the best
at the Exposition. Here again the observer was constantly reminded
of the nationality — both of the artist and his work. Every thing
was distinctly marked with the characteristics of Lowland life, method,
and manners. First in the display were four large pieces by Altraann
of Amsterdam — all excellent paintings — entitled respectively The
Banquet of the Civic Guards, The Five Masters of the Drapers, The
Masters of the Harlem Guild, and The Young Bull — a copy from Paul
Potter. Then came Koster's Vieio on the Yo, Rust's Amsterdam in the
Sixteenth Century, and A Landscape on the Mediterranean Coast by
Hilverdink. The other principal pieces of the collection were Four
Weeks after St. John's Day by Huybers, Bosboom's Church of Trier,
and Mesdag's Evening on the Beach. Besides these, many minor
GRANT'S ADMINISTBATION. 627
paintings in the exhibit testified of the genius of the Lowland
artists.
In the eastern galleries of the annex were placed a few meritor-
ious pictures by the painters of Brazil and Mexico. But the collec-
tions were comparatively unimportant. Among the Brazilian produc-
tions the best were The Defense of Cabrito and The Battle of Humaita —
both scenes from the recent war with Paraguay. In the Mexican
gallery the most interesting pieces were The Valley of Mexico by Val-
esquez, and portraits of Bartholomew de las Casas and Donna Isabella
of Portugal. — Such is a brief survey of the art treasures of Memorial
Hall.
During the months of early summer, every day brought its
throng to Fairmount Park. The enthusiasm of the people rose with
the occasion. The fame of the great Exposition spread through all
the land. Success had crowned the enterprise. As the Anniversary
of Independence drew near preparations were made for an elaborate
celebration at Philadelphia. The day came. Countless multitudes
thronged the streets.* The city was alive with flags and banners.
Battery answered battery with thunderous congratulation. The scene
was set in Independence Square, in the rear of the old Hall, on the
very spot where liberty was proclaimed a century ago. Platforms
were erected and awnings spread above them, where four thousand in-
vited guests could be seated to witness the ceremonies. The people
crowded into the open space to the south until the whole square was
a sea of upturned faces. Senator Ferry of Michigan, acting Vice-
President of the United States, was the presiding officer. General
Hawley and other members of the Centennial Commission acted as his
assistants. Dom Pedro II. and Prince Oscar of Sweden sat near by,
and distinguished citizens of many nations were present. At ten
o'clock the exercises were formally opened. Centennial hymns were
sung, and the national airs were played by the finest bands of the
country. Richard Henry Lee, grandson of him who offered the fa-
mous Resolution of Independence, then read the Declaration from the
original manuscript. Other music followed ; and then came the read-
ing of The National Ode by Bayard Taylor. Last of all came The
Centennial Oration by William M. Evarts of New York. The throng
receded, and the ceremonies were at an end. But the pageant was re-
vived at night with a display of fireworks and a brilliant illumination
of the city.
*It was estimated that on the night of the 3d of July there were fully two hun-
dred and fifty thousand strangers in Philadelphia.
628 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
The daily attendance at the Exhibition grounds during the sum-
mer varied from five thousand to two hundred and seventy-five thou-
sand. And the interest in the Centennial \vas intensified near its
close. The whole number of visitors attending the Exposition, as
shown by the registry of the gates, was nine million seven hundred
and eighty-six thousand one hundred and fifty-one. The daily average
attendance was sixty-one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight.
The grounds were open for one hundred and fifty-eight days, and the
total receipts for admission were three million seven hundred and
sixty-one thousand five hundred and ninety-eight dollars.
On the 10th of November — in accordance with the purpose of the
Centennial Commissioners — the International Exhibition of 1876 was
formally closed. At two o'clock in the afternoon the President of
the United States attended by General Hawley, Director-General
Goshorn — upon whom for his successful management of the Exposi-
tion too great praise can hardly be bestowed — other members of the
Commission, and distinguished foreigners — ascended the platform, and
the ceremonies began. Theodore Thomas's magnificent orchestra
again furnished music worthy of the occasion. A hundred thousand
people were present to witness the closing exercises. Brief addresses
were delivered by the Honorable Daniel J. Morrell of Pennsylvania
and the Honorable John Welch, president of the Board of Finance.
The history of the Exposition and of its management was then re-
counted in appropriate orations by Major Goshorn and General Haw-
ley. The hymn America was sung by the audience, led by the or-
chestra ; and then President Grant arose and said : —
" I DECLARE THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION CLOSED."
The valves of the great Corliss engine were shut, and the work
was done. In its general character and results the Exposition had
outranked all of its predecessors, and had left an impress upon the
minds of the American people likely to endure for a generation and
then become a patriotic tradition with posterity.*
* Since the close of the Exliibition steps have been taken to secure as far as p/acti-
cable the 'permanency of the Centennial display. Machinery Hall has been purchased
by the Common Council of Philadelphia, and is to stand intact. The Main Building
also, has been sold by auction, and the purchasers have decided that it shall remain as a
permanent Exposition hall. The Woman's Executive Committee have voted that their
Pavilion shall also stand in its present state. The authorities of Great Britain, Ger-
many, and France have given their respective Government Buildings to the city of
Philadelphia as permanent ornaments of the grounds and as tokens of international
good will ; and it seems not unlikely that the principal features of the delightful park,
where so many thousand people have spent the holiday hours of the Centennial sum-
mer, will be preserved as they were during the Exposition.
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION.
629
During the last year of President Grant's administration the
country was disturbed by A war with the Sioux Indians. These
fierce savages had, in 1867, made a treaty with the United States
agreeing to relinquish all the territory south of the Niobrara, west of
the one hundred and fourth meridian, and north of the forty-sixth
parallel of latitude. By this treaty the Sioux were confined to a
larsre reservation in southwestern
Dakota, and upon this reservation
they agreed to retire by the 1st of
January, 1876. Meanwhile, how-
ever, gold was discovered among
the Black Hills — a region the
greater part of which belonged, by
the terms of the treaty, to the
Sioux reservation. But no treaty
could keep the hungry horde of
gold-diggers and adventurers from
overrunning the interdicted dis-
trict. This gave the Sioux a good
excuse for gratifying their native s*^^^^ °^ ™^ ^^^^^ ^^^' ^^'^•
disposition by breaking over the limits of the reservation and roam-
ing at large through Wyoming and Montana, burning houses, steal-
ing horses, and murdering whoever opposed them.
The Government now undertook to drive the Sioux upon their
reservation. A large force of regulars, under Generals Terry and
Crook, was sent into the mountainous country of the Upper Yellow-
stone, and the savages to the number of several thousand, led by
their noted chieftain Sitting Bull, were crowded back against the Big
Horn Mountains and River. Generals Custer and Reno, who were
sent forward with the Seventh Cavalry to discover the whereabouts
of the Indians, found them encamped in a large village extending
for nearly three miles along the left bank of the Little Horn. On
the 25th of June, General Custer, without waiting for reinforcements,
charged headlong with his division into the Indian town, and was
immediately surrounded by thousands of yelling warriors. Of the
details of the struggle that ensued very little is known. For General
Custer and every man of his command fell in the fight. The conflict
equaled, if it did not surpass, in desperation and disaster any other
Indian battle ever fought in America. The whole loss of the Sev-
enth Cavalry was two hundred and sixty-one killed, and fifty-two
wounded. General Reno, who had been engaged with the savages
630 BISTOBY OF THE UNITED STATES.
at the lower end of the town, held his position on the blufiPs of the
Little Horn until General Gibbon arrived with reinforcements and
saved the remnant from destruction.
Other divisions of the army were soon hurried to the scene of
hostilities. During the summer and autumn the Indians were beaten
in several engagements, and negotiations were opened looking to the
removal of the Sioux to the Indian Territory. But still a few des-
perate bands held out against the authority of the Government; be-
sides, the civilized Nations of the Territory objected to having the
fierce savages of the North for their neighbors. On the 24th of No-
vember, the Sioux were decisively defeated by the Fourth Cavalry,
under Colonel McKenzie, at a pass in the Big Horn Mountains. The
Indians lost severely, and their village, containing a hundred and
seventy-three lodges, was entirely destroyed. The army now went
into winter-quarters at various points in the hostile country ; but
active operations were still carried on by forays and expeditions during
December and January. On the 5th of the latter month, the sav-
ages were again overtaken and completely routed by the division
of Colonel Miles.
Soon after this defeat, the remaining bands, under Sitting Bull and
Crazy Horse, being able to offer no further serious resistance, escaped
across the border and became subject to the authorities of Canada.
Here they remained until the following autumn, when the Govern-
ment opened negotiations with them for their return to their reserva-
tion in Dakota. A commission, headed by General Terry, met Sitting
Bull and his warriors at Fort AValsh, on the Canadian frontier. Here
a conference was held on the 8th of October. Full pardon for past
oifenses was offered to the Sioux on condition of their peaceable re-
turn and future good behavior. But the irreconcilable Sitting Bull
and his savage chiefs rejected the proposal Avitli scorn; the conference
was broken off, and the Sioux were left at large in the British domin-
ions north of Milk River.*
The excitement occasioned by the outbreak of the war with the
Sioux, and even the interest felt in the Centennial celebration, was soon
overshadowed by the agitation of the public mind, attendant upon the
twenty-third Presidential election. Before the close of June the national
conventions were held and standard-bearers selected by the two leading
political parties. General Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio and William
s: The result of the Fort Walsh conference was by no means distasteful to the Govern-
ment. By formally refusing to return to their reservation, the Indians virtually re-
nounced all relations witii the United States, and the authorities were thus, by an unex-
pected stroke of good fortune, freed from the whole complication. Canada can hardly
be congratulated on such an accession to her population !
GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. , 631
A. Wheeler of New York, were chosen as candidates by the Repub-
licans ; Samuel J. Tilden of New York and Thomas A. Hendricks of
Indiana, by the Democrats. A third — the Independent Geeen-
BACK — party also appeared, and presented as candidates Peter Cooper
of New York and Samuel F. Gary of Ohio. The canvass began early
and Avith great spirit. The battle-cry of the Democratic party was
Reform — reform in the public service and in all the methods of ad-
ministration. For it was alleged that many of the departments of
the Government and the officers presiding therein had become cor-
rupt in practice and in fact. The Republicans answered back with
the cry of Reform, — averring a willingness and an anxiety to correct
public abuses of whatsoever sort, and to bring to condign punishment
all who dared to prostitute the high places of honor to base uses. To
this it was added that the nationality of the United States, as against
the doctrine of State sovereignty, must be upheld, and that the rights
of the colored people of the South must be protected with additional
safeguards. The Independent party echoed the cry of Reform — mon-
etary reform first, and all other reforms afterwards. For it was al-
leged by the leaders of this party that the measure of redeeming the
national legal-tenders and other obligations of the United States in
gold — which measure was advocated by both the other parties — was
a project unjust to the debtor-class, iniquitous in itself, and impossi-
ble of accomplishment. And it was further argued by the Independ-
ents that the money-idea itself ought to be revolutionized, and that
a national paper currency ought to be provided by the Government,
and be based, not on specie, but on a bond bearing a low rate of
interest, and interconvertible, at the option of the holder, with the
currency itself. But the advocates of this theory had only a slight
political organization, and did not succeed in securing a single elect-
oral vote. The real contest lay — as it had done for twenty years —
between the Republicans and the Democrats. The canvass drew to a
close. The election was held , the general result was ascertained, and
both parties claimed the victory ! The election was so evenly balanced
between the two candidates, there had been so much irregularity in
the voting and subsequent electoral proceedings in the States ot
Florida, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Oregon, and the powers of
Congress over the votes of such States were so vaguely defined, under
existing legislation, that no certain declaration of the result could be
made. The public mind was confounded with perplexity and excite-
ment ; and more than once were heard the ominous threatenings of
«ivil war.
632 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
When Congress convened in December, the whole question of
the disputed presidency came at once before that body for adjust-
ment. The situation was seriously complicated by the political
complexion of the Senate and the House of Representatives. In the
former body the Republicans had a majority sufficient to control
its action ; while in the House the Democratic majority was still
more decisive and equally willful. The debates began and seemed
likely to be interminable. The question at issue was as to whether
the electoral votes of the several States should, at the proper time, be
opened and counted by the presiding officer of the Senate, in accord-
ance with the immemorial and constitutional usage in such cases, or
whether, in view of the existence of duplicate and spurious returns
from some of the States, and of alleged gross irregularities and frauds
in others, some additional court ought to be constituted to open and
count the ballots. Meanwhile the necessity of doing something became
more and more imperative. The great merchants and manufacturers
of the country and the boards of trade in the principal cities grew
clamorous for a speedy and peaceable adjustment of the difficulty.
The spirit of compromise gained ground ; and after much debating in
Congress it was agreed that all the disputed election returns should be
referred to a Joint High Commission, consisting of five members to
be chosen from the United States Senate, five from the House of
Representatives, and five from the Supreme Court. 'The judgment of
this tribunal should be final in all matters referred thereto for de-
cision. The Commission was accordingly constituted. The counting
was begun as usual in the presence of the Senate and the House of
Representatives. When the disputed and duplicate returns were
reached they were referred. State by State, to the Joint High Commis-
sion ; and on the 2d of March, only two days before the time for the hi'
auguration, a final decision was rendered. The Republican candidates
were declared elected. One hundred and eighty-five electoral votes
were cast for Hayes and Wheeler, and one hundred and eighty-four foi
Tilden and Hendricks. The greatest political crisis in the history of
the country passed harmlessly by without violence or bloodshed.
HAYES'S ADMINISTRATION.
633
CHAPTER LXIX.
HAYES'S ADMINISTRATION, 1877-1881.
RUTHERFORD B. HAYES, nineteenth President of the United
States, was born in Delaware, Ohio, on the 4th day of October,
1822. His ancestors were soldiers of the Revolution. His primary
education was received in the public schools. Afterwards, his studies
Avere extended
to Greek and
Latin at the
N o r w a 1 k
Academy; and
in 1837 he
became a stu-
dent at Webb's
preparatory
school, at Mid-
dletown, Con-
necticut. In
the following
year.
he en-
tered the
Freshman
class at Ken-
yon College,
and in 1842
was graduated
from that in-
stitution with
the highest
Three years after his graduation, he completed
his legal studies at Harvard University, and soon afterward began
the practice of his profession, first at Marietta, then at Fremont,
and finally as city solicitor, in Cincinnati. Here he won distinguished
reputation as a lawyer. During the Civil War he performed much
honorable service in the Union cause, rose to the rank of major-
PRESIDENT HAYES.
honors of his class.
634 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
general, and in 1864, while still in the field, was elected to Congress.
Three years later he was chosen governor of his native State, and
was reelected in 1869, and again in 1875. At the Cincinnati conven-
tion of 1876, he had the good fortune to be nominated for the presi-
dency over several of the most eminent men of the nation.
In his inaugural address, delivered on the 5th of March,* President
Hayes indicated the policy of his administration. The patriotic and
conciliatory utterances of the address did much to quiet the bitter
spirit of partisanship which for many months had disturbed the
country. The distracted South was assured of right purposes on the
part of the new chief-magistrate ; a radical reform in the civil service
was avowed as a part of his policy ; and a speedy return to specie
payments was recommended as the final cure for the deranged finances
of the nation. The immediate effect of these assurances — so evidently
made in all good faith and honesty — was to rally around the incipient
administration the better part of all the parties and to introduce a new
"Era of Good Feeling" as peaceable and beneficent in its character
as the former turbulence had been exciting and dangerous.
On the 8th of March, the President named the members of his
cabinet. Here, again, he marked out a new departure in the policy
of the government. For the cabinet, though exceptionably able and
statesmanlike, was noticeably non-partisan in its character. As secre-
tary of state William M. Evarts, of New York, was chosen; John
Sherman, of Ohio, was named as secretary of the treasury ; George W.
McCrary, of Iowa, secretary of war; Richard W. Thompson, of
Indiana, secretary of the navy; Carl Schurz, of Missouri, secretary of
the interior; Charles E. Devens, of Massachusetts, attorney-general;
and David M. Key, of Tennessee, postmaster-general. These nomina-
tions were duly ratified by the Senate ; and the new administration
and the new century of the republic were ushered in together.
In the summer of 1877 occurred the great labor disturbance
known as the Railroad Strike. For several years the mining
districts of the country had been vexed with disputes and outbreaks
having their origin in the question of usages. The manufacturing
towns and cities had witnessed similar troubles, and the great cor-
porations having control of the lines of travel and commerce were
frequently brought to a stand-still by the determined opposition of
their employes. The workingmeu and the capitalists of the country
*The4<Aof March fell on Sunday. The same thing has happened in the following
years: 1753, 1781, 1821 (Monroe's inauguration, second term), 1849 (Taylor's inaug-
uration), 1877 (Hayes's inauguration); and the same will hereafter occur as follows:
1917, 1945, 1973, 2001, 2029, 2057, 2085. 2125, 2153.
HAYES'S ADMINISTRATION. 635
had for some time maintained towards each other a kind of armed
neutrality alike hurtful to the interests of both. In the spring of this
year, the managers of the great railways leading from the seaboard
to the West declared a reduction of ten per cent in the wages of their
workmen. This measure, which was to take effect at the middle of
July, was violently resisted by the employes of the companies, and
the most active steps were taken to prevent its success. The workmen
of the various roads entered into combinations, and the officers stood
firm. On the 16th of July, the employes of the Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad left their posts and gathered such strength in Baltimore and
at Martinsburg, West Virginia, as to prevent the running of trains
and set the authorities at defiance. The militia was called out by
Governor Matthews and sent to Martinsburg, but was soon dispersed
by the strikers who, for the time, remained masters of the line. The
President then ordered General French to the scene with a body of
regulars, and the blockade of the load was raised. On the 20th of
the month, a terrible tumult occurred in Baltimore ; but the troops
succeeded in scattering the rioters of whom nine were killed and
many wounded.
Meanwhile the strike spread everywhere. In less than a week
the trains had been stopped on all the important roads between the
Hudson and the Mississippi. Except in the cotton-growing States the
insurrection was universal. Travel ceased, freights perished en route,
business was paralyzed. In Pittsburgh the strikers, rioters, and dan-
gerous classes gathering in a mob to the number of twenty thousand,
obtained complete control of the city and for two days held a reign
of terror unparalleled in the history of the country. The lawless
violence and madness of the scene recalled the fiery days of the
French Revolution. The Union Depot and all the machine shops
and other railroad buildings of the city were burned. A hundred and
twenty-five locomotives, and two thousand five hundred cars laden
with valuable cargoes, were destroyed amid the wildest havoc and
uproar. The insurrection was finally suppressed by the regular troops
and the Pennsylvania militia, but not until nearly a hundred lives had
been lost and property destroyed to the value of more than three mill-
ions of dollars.
On the 25th of the month, a similar but less terrible riot occurred
at Chicago. In this tumult fifteen of the insurgents were killed by
the military of the city. On the next day, St. Louis was for some
hours in peril of the mob. San Francisco was at the same time the
scene of a dangerous outbreak which was here directed against th&
636 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Chinese immigrants and the managers of the lumber yards. Cincin-
nati, Columbus, Louisville, Indianapolis, and Fort Wayne were for
a while in danger, but escaped without serious loss of life or property.
By the close of the month, the alarming insurrection was at an end.
Business and travel flowed back into their usual channels; but the
sudden outbreak had given a great shock to the public mind, and
revealed a hidden peril to American institutions.
In the mean time, a war had broken out with the Nez Perc6
Indians of Idaho. This tribe of natives had been known to the Gov-
ernment since 1806, when the first treaty was made with them by the
explorers, Lewis and Clarke. Afterwards, missionary stations were
established among them, and the nation remained on friendly terms
until after the war with Mexico. In 1854 the authorities of the
LTnited States, purchased a part of the Nez Perce territory, large reser-
vations being made in North-western Idaho and North-eastern Oregon ;
but some of the chiefs refused to ratify the purchase and remained at
large. This was the beginning of difficulties.
The war began with the usual depredations by the Indians. Gen-
eral Howard, commanding the Department of the Columbia, marched
against them with a small force of regulars; but the Nez Perces, led
by their noted chieftain Joseph, fled first in this direction, and then in
that, avoiding battle. During the greater part of the summer the pur-
suit continued; still the Indians could not be overtaken. In the fall
they were chased through the mountains into Northern ]Montana, where
they were confronted by other troops commanded by Colonel Miles.
The Nez Perces, thus hemmed in, were next driven across the
Missouri River, near the mouth of the Musselshell, and were finally
surrounded in their camp, north of the Bear Paw Mountains. Here,
on the 4th of October, they were attacked by the forces of Colonel
Miles. A hard battle was fought, and the Indians were completely
routed. Only a few, led by the chief White Bird, escaped. AH
the rest were either killed or made prisoners. Three hundred and
seventy-five of the captive Nez Perces were brought back to the
American post on the Missouri. The troops of General Howard had
made forced marches through a mountainous country for a distance of
sixteen hundred miles! — The campaign was crowned with complete
success.
During the year 1877, the public mind was greatly agitated
concerning the Remonetization of Silver. By the first coinage
regulations of the United States, the standard unit of value was the
American Silver Dollar, containing three hundred and seventy -one
HAYES'S ADMINISTRATION. 637
and one- fourth grains of pure silver. From the date of the adoption
of this standard, in 1792, until 1873, the quantity of pure metal in this
standard unit had never been changed, though the amount of alloy
contained in the dollar was several times altered. Meanwhile, in 1849,
a gold dollar was added to the coinage, and from that time forth the
standard unit of value existed in both metals. In the years 1873-
'74, at a time when, owing to the premium on gold and silver, both
metals were out of circulation, a series oi' acts were adopted by Con-
gress bearing upon the standard unit of value, whereby the legal-
tender quality of silver was first abridged and then abolished. These
enactments were completed by the report of the Coinage Committee in
1874, by which the silver dollar was finally omitted from the list of
coins to be struck at the national mints. The general effect of these
acts was to leave the gold dollar of twenty-three and twenty-two-
hundredths grains the single standard unit of value in the United
States.
In January of 1875, the Resumption Act was passed by Con-
gress, whereby it was declared that on the 1st of January, 1879, the
Government of the United States should begin to redeem its outstand-
ing legal-tender notes in coin. As the time for resumption drew near,
and the premium on gold fell off, the question was raised as to the
meaning of "coin" in the act for resuming specie payments; and now,
for the first time the attention of the people at large was aroused to
the fact that by the acts of 1873-'74, the privilege of paying debts in
silver had been taken away, and that after the beginning of 1879 ail
obligations must be discharged according to the measure of the gold
dollar only. A great agitation followed. The cry for the remonetiza-
iion of silver was heard everywhere. The question reached the Gov-
ernment, and early in 1878 a measure was passed by Congress for the
restoration of the legal-tender quality of the old silver dollar, and pro-
viding for the compulsory coinage of that unit at the mints at a rate
of not less than two millions of dollars a month. The President re-
turned the bill with his objections, but the veto was crushed under a
tremendous majority ; for nearly three-fourths of the members of Con-
gress, without respect to party affiliations, gave their support to the
measure, and the old double standard of values was restored.
In the summer of 1878, several of the Gulf States were scourged
with a Yellow Fever Epidemic, unparalleled in the history of the
country. The disease made its appearance in New Orleans in the
latter part of May, and from thence was quickly scattered among the
other towns along the Mississippi. Unfortunately, the attention of
638 HISTOR Y OF THE UNITED STA TES.
the people in the Gulf country had been but little given to sanitary
precautions, and the Southern cities were nearly all in a condition to
invite the presence of the scourge. The terror soon spread from town
to town, and the people began to fly from the pestilence. The cities
of Memphis and Grenada became a scene of desolation. At Vicks-
burgh the ravages of the plague were almost equally terrible; and
even in the parish-towns remote from the river, and as far north as
Nashville and Louisville, the horrors of the scourge were felt. All
summer long the disease held on unabated. The helpless populations
along the Lower Mississippi languished and died by thousands. A
regular system of contributions was established in the Northern States,
and men and treasure were poured out without stint to relieve the
suffering South. The efforts of the Howard Association at New Or-
leans, Memphis, and elsewhere, were almost unequaled in heroism
and sacrifice. After more than twenty thousand people had fallen
victims to the plague, the grateful frosts of October came at last and
ended the pestilence.
By the XVIIIth Article of the Treaty of Washington,* it w'as
agreed that the right of the inhabitants of the United States in cer-
tain sea-fisheries which had hitherto belonged exclusively to the sub-
jects of Great Britain, should be acknowledged and maintained. It
was conceded, moreover, that the privilege of taking fish of every
kind — except shell-fish — on the sea-coasts and shores, and in the
bays, harbors, and creeks of the provinces of Quebec, Nova Scotia,
New Brunswick, Prince Edward's Island, and the islands thereunto
adjacent, without restriction as to distance from the shore, should be
guaranteed to American fishermen, without prejudice or partiality.
On the other hand, the government of the United States agreed to
relinquish the duties which had hitherto been charged on certain
kinds of fish imported by British subjects into American harbors.
Several other concessions of minor importance were mutually made
by the contracting parties; and in order to balance any discrepancy
that might appear in the aggregate of such concessions, and to make
the settlement of a vexed question full, fair, and final, it was further
agreed that any total advantage to the United States arising from
the treaty, might be compensated by a sum in gross to be paid by the
American government to Great Britain. And in order to determine
what such sum should be, a Commission was provided for, the same
to consist of one commissioner to be appointed by the Queen, one
by the President, and a third (provided the Queen and the Presi-
* See page 556.
HAYES'S ADMINISTRATION. 639
dent should not agree on a third) by the Austrian ambassador at
the Court of St, James!* Accordingly, in the summer of 1877, the
Commission was constituted, and the sittings began at Halifax. But
little attention was given to the proceedings of the body until No-
vember, when the country was startled by the announcement that
by the casting vote of Mr. Delfosse, Belgian minister to the United
States, who had been named as third commissioner by the Austrian
ambassador at London, an award of jive millions of dollars had been
made against the American government ! The decision was received
with general surprise, both in the United States and in Europe;
and for awhile it seemed probable that the arbitration might be
renounced as iniquitous. It was decided, hoAvever, that the award,
whether just or unjust, would better stand; and accordingly, in
November, 1878, the amount was paid — not without great popular
dissatisfaction — to the British government.
Thfe year 1878 witnessed the establishment of A eesident Chinese
EMBASSY at Washington. For twenty years the great and liberal treaty
negotiated by Anson Burlingame had been in force between the United
States and China. Under the protection of this compact, the commer-
cial relations of the two countries had been vastly extended, and a knowl-
edge of the institutions, manners, and customs prevalent in the Celes-
tial Empire so widely diffused as to break down in some measure the
race-prejudice existing against the Mongolians. The enlightened
policy of the reigning emperor had also contributed to establish more
friendly intercourse with the United States, and to promote such
measures as should make that intercourse lasting. The idea of send-
ing resident ambassadors to the American government had been en-
tertained for several years. The emperor had been assured that the
people of China — more particularly her ministers — would be received
with all the courtesy shown to the most favored nation. The officers
chosen by the imperial government as its representatives in the United
States were Chen Lan Pin, minister plenipotentiary, Yung Wing,
assistant envoy, and Yung Tsang Siang, secretary of legation. On
the 28th of September the embassy was received by the President.
*A strange and inexplicable provision. As a matter of fact, it came to pass that the
man who by the terms of the treaty held the power of appointing, and who did appoint,
the umpire in the Halifax Commission, was Count Von Beust, a Bourbon of the Bour-
bons in politics, a Saxon renegade, an upholder of the House of Hapsburg by choice,
and a hater of all republican institutions. It thus happened that a question which had
proved too much for the Joint High Commission itself, was remanded for settlement to
a political adventurer temporarily resident in London! To understand the proceeding
requires the wisdom of a — statesman!
640 HISTOR Y OF THE UNITED ST A TES.
The ceremonies of the occasion were among the most novel and in-
teresting ever witnessed in Washington. The speech of Chen Lan
Pin was equal in dignity and approi)riateness to the best efforts of a
European dij^lomatist. Addressing the President the Chinese minister
said :
"Mr. President: His Majesty, the Emperor of China, in ap-
pointing us to reside at Washington as ministers, instructed us to
present your Excellency his salutations, and to express his assurances
of friendship for you and the people of the United States. His
Majesty hopes that your administration may be one of signal success,
and that it may bring lasting peace and prosperity to the whole
country. On a former occasion the Chinese government had the
honor to send an embassy to Washington on a special mission, and
the results were most beneficent. His Majesty cherishes the hope
that this embassy will not only be the means of establishing on a
firm basis the amicable relations of the two countries, but may also
be the starting-point of a new diplomatic era which will eventually
unite the East and West under an enlightened and progressive civil-
ization."
The history of modern times contains many pleasing evidence*
of the growing estimate placed by civilized states upon the value of
human life. In the legislation of Congress several important acts
bear witness to the general interest felt in the United States on the
subject of better protection for those who are exposed by land and sea.
The question of affording adequate succor to shipwrecked sailors has
especially engrossed the attention of the government, and many meas-
ures have l)een proposed with a view of giving greater security to
"them that go down to the sea in ships." During the last session of
the Forty-fifth Congress a bill was brought forward by S. S. Cox, of
New York, for the reorganization of the IjIFE-Saving Service of
THE United States, under the patronage and control of the govern-
ment. This service had existed as a priv^ate enterprise since 1871,
The plan proposed and adopted June 18, 1878, embraced the establish-
ment of regular stations and light-houses on all the exposed parts of
the Atlantic coast and along the great lakes. Each station was to be
manned by a band of surfmen experienced in the dangers peculiar to
the shore in times of storms, and drilled in the best methods of rescue
and resuscitation. Boats of the most approved pattern — capable of sur-
viving any storm that ever lashed the sea — were provided and
equipped. A hundred appliances and inventions suggested by the
wants of the service — life-cars with hawsers, and mortars for firing
HAYES'S ADMINISTRATION. 641
shot-lines into vessels foundering at a distance from the shore — were
supplied and their use skillfully taught to the brave men who were
employed at the stations. The success of the enterprise has been so
great as to reflect the highest credit on its promoters. The number of
lives saved through the direct agency of the service reaches to thou-
sands annually, and the amount of human suffering and distress alleviated
by this beneficent movement is beyond computation. So carefully are
the exposed coasts of the United States now guarded that it is almost
impossible for a foundering ship to be driven within sight of the shore
without at once beholding through the darkness of the otherwise hope-
less night the sudden glare of the red-light signal flaming up from the
beach, telling the story of friends near by and rescue soon to come.
On the 1st of January, 1879, the Resumption of Specie Pay-
ments was formally accomplished by the treasury of the United
States. For more than seventeen years, owing to the disorders arising
from the Civil "War, gold and silver coin had been at a premium
over the legal-tender notes of the Government. During this whole
period the monetary afiairs of the Nation had been in a state of dis-
traction. As a matter of fact, the monetary unit had been so fluctu-
ating as to render legitimate business almost impossible. The actual
purchasing power of a dollar could hardly be predicted from one
week to another. Resulting from this, a spirit of rampant specula-
tion had taken possession of most of the market values of the coun-
try. The lawful transactions of the street, carried forward in obedi-
ence to the plain principles of political economy, suffered shipwreck,
-while jparvenu statesmen gave lectures on the nature of debt and the
evils of overproduction ! After the passage of the Resumption Act,
in 1875, owing to the steady and rapid appreciation of the value of
the monetary unit, the debtor classes of the country entered a period
of great hardship; for their indebtedness constantly augmented in a
ratio beyond the probability, if not the possibility, of payment. It
was an epoch of financial ruin and bankruptcy, which was only
checked, but not ended, by the abrogation of the Bankrupt Act, in
1878. With the near approach of Resumption, however, a certain
degree of confidence supervened; and the actual accomplishment of
the fact was hailed by many as the omen of better times.
The presidential election of 1880 was accompanied with the usual
excitement attendant upon great political struggles in the United
States. The congressional elections of 1878 had generally gone
against the Republican party, insomuch that in both houses of the
Porty-sixth Congress the Democrats had a clear majority. It was
41
642 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
therefore not unreasonable to expect that in the impending contest for
the presidency the Democratic party would prove successful. The
leaders of this party were hopeful of success and entered the campaign
with renewed zeal and energy. The Republican national convention
was held in Chicago on the 2d and 3d of June. A platform of prin-
ciples was adopted largely retrospective. The history of the party
during the twenty years of its supremacy in the government was
recited as the best reason why its lease of power should be continued
by the people. The platform reaffirmed and emphasized the doctrine
of nationality as opposed to the theory of states' rights; declared in
favor of popular education ; advocated a system of discriminating duties
in favor of American industries; called on Congress to limit Chinese
immigration; avoided the question of finance; complimented the
administration of President Hayes; and arraigned the Democratic
party as unpatriotic in its principles and fraudulent in its practices.
Upon this platform — after the greater part of two days had been con-
sumed in balloting — General James A. Garfield, of Ohio, was nom-
inated for President, and Chester A. Arthur, of New York, for Vice-
President.
The Democratic national convention assembled in Cincinnati, on
the 22d of June. The platform of principles declared adherence to the
doctrines and traditions of the party ; opposed the tendency to central-
ization in the government; adhered to gold and silver money and
paper convertible into coin; advocated a tariif for revenue only; pro-
claimed a free ballot; denounced the administration as the creature of
a conspiracy; opposed the presence of troops at the polls; compli-
mented Samuel J. Tilden for his patriotism; declared for free ships
and an amendment to the Burlingame treaty as against Chinese im-
migration; and appealed to the acts of the Forty-sixth Congress as
proof and illustration of Democratic economy and wisdom. After
adopting this platform the convention nominated for the presidency
General Winfield S. Hancock, of New York, and for the vice-presi-
dency William H. English, of Indiana.
Meanwhile the National Greenback party had held a convention
in Chicago, on the 9th of June, and nominated as standard-bearers
General James B. Weaver, of Iowa, for President, and General Benja-
min J. Chambers, of Texas, for Vice-President. The })latform of
principles declared in favor of the rights of the laborer, as against the
exactions of capital; denounced monopolies and syndicates; proclaimed
the sovereign power of the government over the coinage of metallic
and the issuance of paper money; advocated the abolition of the
HA YES'S ADMINISTRA TIOK 643
National banking system and the substitution of legal-tender currency ;
declared for the payment of the bonded debt of the United States as
against all refunding schemes; denounced land-grants; opposed
Chinese immigration and an increase of the standing army; favoied
the equal taxation of all property and unrestricted suffi'age ; demanded
reform in the methods of congressional proceedings; and appealed for
support to the sense of justice in the American people.
The canvass had not progressed far until it became evident that
the contest lay between the Republican and the Democratic party, and
that the long-standing sectional division into North and South was
likely once more to decide the contest in favor of the former. That
part of the Democratic platform which declared for a tariff for revenue
only, alarmed the manufacturing interests and consolidated them in
support of the Republican candidates. The banking and bond-hold-
ing classes rallied with great unanimity to the same standard, and the
old war spirit, aroused at the appearance of a " solid South " insured a
solid North against the Democracy. The election resulted in the choice
of Garfield and Arthur. Two hundred and fourteen electoral votes,
embracing those of all the Northern States except New Jersey, Nevada,
and four out of the five votes of California, were cast for the Republican
candidates, and one hundred and fifty-five votes, including those of
-^v ry Southern State, were given to Hancock and English. The can-
didates of the National party secured no electoral votes, though the
popular vote given to Weaver and Chambers aggregated 307,000 as
against 81,000 cast for Cooper and Cary in 1876.
The administration of President Hayes and the last session of the
Forty-sixth Congress expired together on the 4th of March, 1881.
The closing session had been chiefly occupied with the matter of
refunding the national debt. About seven hundred and fifty millions
of dollars of five and six per cent, bonds became due during the year ;
and to provide for the payment or refunding of this large sum was the
most important matter claiming the attention of Congress. Late in
the session a bill was passed by that body providing for the issuance
by the government of new bonds of two classes, both bearing three
per cent. ; the first class payable in from five to twenty years, and the
second class in from one to ten years. The latter bonds were to be
issued in small denominations, adapted to the conditions of a popular
loan. One provision of the bill required the national banks holding
five and six per cent, bonds to surrender the same — the bonds having
fallen due — and to receive instead the new three per cents. This
clause of the law aroused the antagonism of the banks, and by every
644 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
possible means they sought to prevent the passage of the bill. On the
last day of the session, the measure having been adopted by both
houses of Congress, the act was laid before the President for his
approval, which was withheld. A veto message was returned to Con-
gress ; the advocates of the bill being unable to command a two-third's
majority in its favor, the bill failed to become a law, and the session
closed without any provision for the refunding of the 750,000,000
dollars of bonds falling due in 1881.
Soon after retiring from the presidency. General Grant with his
family and a company of personal friends, set out to visit the countries
of Europe and Asia, and to make a tour of the world. Though the
expedition was intended to be private it could but attract the most
conspicuous attention both at home and abroad. The departure from
Philadelphia on the 17th of May, 1877, was the beginning of a pageant
which, in its duration and magnificence, was never before extended to
any citizen of any nation of the earth. Wherever the distinguished ex>
President went he was welcomed with huzzas and dismissed with
plaudits. First in England — at Liverpool, Manchester, London — :
and afterwards, in midsummer, in Belgium, Switzerland, Prussia,
and France, everywhere the General's coming was announced by
the thunder of cannon, the thronging of multitudes, and a chorua
of cheers. A short stay in Italy was followed by a voyage to Alexan^
dria, and a brief sojourn in Egypt. Thence the company proceeded to
Palestine and afterwards to Greece. The following spring found the
ex-President and his party again in Italy — at Rome, Florence, Venice,
and Milan; and the summer carried them into Denmark, Sweden, and
Norway. The next countries visited were Austria and Russia, while
for the winter the distinguished tourists chose the south of France and
Spain. Ireland was visited, and in January of 1879 the company em-
barked from Marseilles for the East. The following year was spent in
visiting the great countries of Asia — India first; then Burmah and
Siam; then China; and then Japan. In the fall of 1879 the party
returned to San Francisco, bearing with them the highest tokens of
esteem which the great nations of the Old World could bestow upon
the honored representative of the civilization of the New.
The census of 1880 was undertaken with more system and care
than ever before in the history of the country. The work was entrusted
to the general superintendency of Professor Francis A. Walker, under
whose direction the admirable census of 1870 was conducted. During
the decade the same astounding progress which had marked the pre-
vious historv of the United States was more than ever illustrated. In
MAYES'S ADMINISTRATION.
645
every source of national power, in every element of national vigor, the
development of the country had continued without abatement. The
total population of the states and territories of the Union now amounted
to 50,152,866 — an increase since 1870 of more than a million inhabit-
ants a year! New York was still the leading state, having a popula-
tion of 5,083,173. Nevada was least populous, showing an enumera-
tion of but 62,265. Of the 11,584,188 added to the population since
the census of 1870, 2,246,551 had been contributed by immigration,
of whom about 85,000 annually came from Germany alone. The
number of cities having a population of over 100,000 inhabitants had
increased during the decade from fourteen to twenty.* The center
of population had moved westward about fifty miles, and now rested
at the city of Cincinnati.
The statistics of trade and industry were likewise of a sort to
gratify patriotism, if not to excite national pride. The current of the
precious metals which for many years had flowed constantly from the
United States to foreign countries turned strongly, in 1880, towards
America. The importation of specie during the year just mentioned
amounted to $93,034,310, while the exportation of the same during
the year reached only $17,142,199. During the greater part of the
period covered by the census abundant crops had followed in almost
unbroken succession, and the overplus in the great staples peculiar to
our soil and climate had gone to enrich the country, and to stimulate
to an unusual degree those fundamental industries upon which national
perpetuity and individual happiness are ultimately founded.f
* The following table will show the population and rate of increase in the ten lead-
ing cities in the United States, according to the censuses of 1870 and 1880:
City.
State.
Population
Per cent,
of increase.
1870
1880
New York . , .
New York ....
942,292
1,206,590
28
Philadelphia . .
Pennsylvania
674,022
846,984
25
Brooklyn ....
New York . .
396,099
586,689
48
St. Louis ....
Missouri . .
310,864
350,522
13
Chicago ....
Illinois . . .
298,977
503,304
72
Baltimore ....
Maryland . .
267,354
333,190
24
Boston
Massachusetts
250,526
362,535
44
Cincinnati ....
Ohio ....
216,239
255,708
22
New Orleans . . .
Louisiana . .
191,418
216,140
13
San Francisco . .
California . .
149,473
233,956
56
t At the date of sending this edition to the press, only the preliminary results of the
census of 1880 have been given to the public.
646 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
During the administration of President Hayes several eminent
Americans passed from the scene of their eartlilj activities. On the
1st of November, 1877, the distinguished Senator Ohver P, Morton,
of Indiana, after battling for many years against the deadly en-
croachments of paralysis, died at his home in Indianapolis. His
death, though not unforeseen, was much lamented. Still more
imiversally felt was the loss of the great poet and journalist, William
Cullen Bryant, who, on the 12th of June, 1878, at the advanced age
of eighty-four, passed from among the living. For more than sixty
years his name had been known and honored wherever the English
language is spoken. His life had been an inspiration, and the
brightest light of American literature was extinguished in his death.
On the 19th of December, in the same year, the illustrious Bayard
Taylor, who had recently been appointed American minister to the
German Empire, died suddenly in the city of Berlin. His life had
been exclusively devoted to literary work ; and almost every depart-
ment of letters, from the common tasks of journalism to the highest
charms of poetry, had been adorned by his genius. His death, at the
early age of fifty-four, left a gap not soon to be filled in the shining
ranks of literature. On the 1st day of November, 1879, Senator
Zachariah Chandler, of Michigan, one of the organizers of the Re-
publican party, and a great leader of that J^arty in the times of the
civil war, died suddenly at Chicago ; and on the 21th day of February,
1881, another senator, the distinguished Matt. H. Carpenter, of
Wisconsin, after a lingering illness, expired at Washington. One
by one the strong men who battled for the preservation of American
nationality in the stormy days of the civil war are passing or have
passed into the land of rest.
ADMINISTRATIONS OF GARFIELD AND ARTHUR.
647
. CHAPTEE LXX.
ADMINISTRATIONS OF GARFIELD AND ARTHUR.
JAMES A. GARFIELD, twentieth President of the United States,
was born at Orange, Cuyahoga county, Ohio, November 19th, 1831.
By the death of his father he was left in infancy to the sole care
of his mother and to the rude surroundings of a backwoods home.
Blest with great
native energy
and an abundance
of physical vigor,
the boy gathered
from country toil
a sound constitu-
tion, and from
country schools
the rudiments
of education.
In boyhood his
services were in
frequent demand
by the farmers
of the neighbor-
hood — for he de-
veloped unusual
skill as a me-
" chanic. After-
wards he served
as a driver and
pilot of a canal
boat plying the
Ohio and Pennsylvania canal. At the age of seventeen he attended
the High School in Chester, where he applied himself with great dili-
gence, extending his studies to algebra, Latin, and Greek. In the fall
of 1851, he entered Hiram College, in Portage county, Ohio, where he
remained as student and instructor until 1854. In that year he entered
JAMES A. GARFIELD.
648 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Williams College, from which, in August of 1856, he was graduated
M'ith honor. He then returned to Ohio, and was made first a professor
and afterwards president of Hiram College. This position he held
until the outbreak of the civil war when he left his post to enter the
army. Meanwhile he had studied law, imbibed a love for politics, and
•een elected to the Ohio State Senate.
As a soldier Garfield was first made lieutenant-colonel and after-
wards colonel of the Forty-second regiment of Ohio volunteers. Ad-
vancing with his men to the front he was soon promoted to a brigadier
generalship, and did good service in Kentucky and Tennessee. He
was made chief of staif to General Rosecrans, and bore a distinguished
part in the battle of Chickamauga. Soon afterwards, while still in the
field, he was, in 1862, elected by the people of his district to the lower
house of Congress, where he continued to serve as a member for seven-
teen years. In 1879 he was elected to the United States Senate, and
hard upon this folio w^ed his nomination and election to the presidency.
American history has furnished but few instances of a more steady and
brilliant rise from the poverty of an obscure boyhood to the most dis-
tinguished elective office in the gift of mankind.
On the 4th of March, 1881, President Garfield, according to the
custom, delivered his inaugural address. A retrospect of the progress
of American civilization during the last quarter of a century was given
and the country congratulated on its high rank among the nations.
The leading topics of politics were briefly reviewed, and the policy of
the executive department of the government with respect to the great
questions likely to engross the attention of the people, set forth with
clearness and precision. The public school system of the United
States should be guarded with jealous care; the old wounds of the
South should be healed and the heartburnings of the civil war be
buried in oblivion; the present banking system should be maintained;
the practices of polygamy should be repressed; Chinese immigration
should be curbed by treaty ; the equal rights of the enfranchised blacks
should be asserted and maintained.
On the day following the inauguration the President sent to the
Senate for confirmation the names of the members of his cabinet.
The nominations were, for secretary of state, James G. Blaine, of
Maine; for secretary of the treasury, William Windom, of Minnesota;
for secretary of war, Robert T. Lincoln, of Illinois; for secretary of the
navy, William H. Hunt, of Louisiana; for secretary of the interior,
Samuel J. Kirkwood, of Iowa; for attorney-general, Wayne McVeagh,
of Pennsylvania; for postmaster-general, Thomas Jj. James, of New
ADMINISTRATIONS OF GARFIELD AND ARTHUR. 649
York. These nominations were promptly confirmed, and the new
administration entered upon its course with omens of an auspicious
future.
One of the first issues which engaged the attention of the govern-
ment after Garfield's accession to the Presidency, was the question of
Reform in the Civil Service. This question had been inherited
from the administration of Hayes, by whom several spasmodic efforts
had been made to introduce better methods in the selection of men to
fill the appointive offices of the United States. The real issue was
whether the choice of the officials of the government should be made
on the grounds of the character and fitness of the candidate, or on the
principle of distributing political patronage to those who had best
served the party — whether men should be promoted from the lower
to the higher grades of official life, and retained according to the
value and proficiency of the service rendered, or be elevated to posi-
tion in proportion to their success in carrying elections and maintain-
ing the party in power. The members of Congress to whom the help
of efficient supporters in their own districts and states seemed essential,
and by whom the patronage of the government had been dispensed
since the days of Jackson, held stoutly to the old order, unwilling to
relinquish their influence over the appointing power. President
Hayes, after vainly attempting to establish the opposite policy, aban-
doned the field near the close of his administration. The national
Republican platform of 1880, however, vaguely endorsed "civil service
reform" as a principle of the party, and some expectation existed that
President Garfield would follow the policy of his predecessor. With
the incoming of the new administration the rush for office was unpre-
cedented in the previous history of the country. The politicians and
place-seekers, who claimed to have "carried the election," swarmed
into Washington and thronged the executive mansion, clamoring for
office, until, for the time, all plans and purposes of reform in the civil
service were quite crushed out of sight and forgotten. As always
hitherto, ambition for political power and hunger for the spoils of
office triumphed over the better sense of the American people.
The prospects of the new administration were soon darkened
with political difficulties. A division arose in the ranks of the Re-
publican party, threatening the disruption and ruin of that organiza-
tion. The two wings of the Republicans were nicknamed the " Half-
breeds " and the " Stalwarts : " the latter, headed by Senator Conkling,
of New York, being the division which had so resolutely supported
General Grant for the Presidency in the Chicago Convention; the
650 HISTORY OF TEE UNITED STATES.
former, led by Mr. Blaine, now Secretary of State, and indorsed by
the President himself, had control of the government, and were
numerically stronger than their opponents. The Stalwarts claimed
the right of dispensing the appointive offices of the Govermnent, after
the manner which prevailed for several preceding administrations;
that is, the distribution of the offices in the several States, under the
name of patronage, by the Senators and Representatives of those States
in Congress. The President, supported by his division of the party,
and in general by the reform element in politics, insisted on naming
the officers in the various States according to his own wishes and what
he conceived to be the fitness of things.
The chief clash between the two influences in the party occurred
in respect to the offices in New York. The collectorship of customs
for the port of New York is the best appointive office in the gift of
the Government. To fill this position the President appointed Judge
"William Robertson, and the appointment was bitterly antagonized by
the New York Senators, Roscoe Conkling and Thomas C. Piatt, who,
failing to prevent the confirmation of Robertson, resigned their seats,
returned to their State, and failed of a reelection. The breach thus
effected in the Republican ranks was such as to threaten the dis-
memberment of the party.
Such was the condition of affairs at the adjournment of the Senate
in June. A few days afterward the President made arrangements to
visit "Williams College, where his two sons were to be placed at school,
and to pass a short vacation with his sick wife at the sea-side. On
the morning of July 2d, in company with Secretary Blaine and a few
friends, he entered the Baltimore depot at Washington, preparatory to
taking the train for Long Branch, N. J. A moment afterward he was
approached by a miserable political miscreant named Charles Julius
Guiteau, who, from beliind, and unperceived, came within a few feet
of the company, drew a pistol, and fired upon the chief magistrate
of the Republic. The aim of the assassin was too well taken, and the
second shot struck the President centrally in the right side of the
back, inflicting a dreadful wound. The bleeding chieftain was quickly
borne away to the executive mansion, and the vile wretch who had com-
mitted the crime was hurried to prison.
For a week or two the hearts of the American people vibrated
between hope and fear. The best surgical aid was procured, and bul-
letins were daily issued containing a brief outline of the President's
condition. The conviction grew day by day that he would ultimately
recover. Two surgical operations were performed with a view of im-
ADMINISTRATIONS OF GARFIELD AND ARTHUR. 651
proving liis chances for life ; but a series of relapses occurred, and the
President gradually weakened under his sufferings. As a last hope
he was, on the 6th of September, carefully conveyed from "Washington
City to Elberon, where he was placed in a cottage only a few
yards from the surf. Here, for a brief period, hope again revived,
but the symptoms were aggravated at intervals, and the patient sank
day by day.
At half past ten on the evening of September 19th, the anniversary
of the battle of Chickamauga, in which President Garfield had won his
chief military reputation, his vital powers suddenly gave way under the
destructive influence of blood poisoning and exhaustion, and in a few
moments death closed the scene. For eighty days he had borne the
pain and anguish of his situation with a fortitude and heroism rarely
witnessed among men. The dark shadow of the crime which had laid
him low heightened rather than eclipsed the luster and glory of his
great and exemplary life.
On the day following this deplorable event Yice-P resident
Arthur took the oath of office in Is^ew York, and immediately repaired
to Washington. For the fourth time in tlie history of the American
Eepublic the duties of the presidency had been devolved by death
upon the man constitutionally provided for such an emergency. The
heart of the people, however, clung for a time to the dead rather than
to the living President. The funeral of Garfield was observed first of
all at Washington, whither the body was taken and placed in state in
the rotunda of the Capitol. Here it was viewed by tens of thousands
of people during the 22d and 23d of September. In his life-time the
illustrious dead had chosen as the place of his burial the Lakeview
Cemetery, at Cleveland, Ohio, and thither, on the 24th of the month, the
remains were conveyed by way of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. As
in the case of the dead Lincoln, the funeral processions and ceremonies
were a pageant, exhibiting every-where the loyal respect and love of
the American people for him who had so lately been their pride. On
the 26th of September his body was laid in its final resting-place. The
day of the burial was observed throughout the country in great as-
semblies gathered from hamlet and town and city, all anxious to tes-
tify, by some appropriate word or token, their sorrow for the great
national calamity, and their appreciation of the grand example of
James A. Garfield's life.
Chester A. Arthur, called by this sad event to be the President of the
United States, was born in Franklin County, Vermont, October 5, 1830.
He is of Irish descent, and was educated at IJnion College, from which
652
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
institution he was graduated in 1849. For a while he taught school
in his native State, and then came to New York City to study law.
Here he was
soon admitted
to the bar and
rapidly rose to
d istinction.
During the
Civil War he
was Quarter-
master-Gener-
al of the State
of New York,
a very impor-
tant and try-
ing office,
which he filled
with great
credit to him-
self and the
'government.
After 18G5 he
returned to
the practice of
law, and was
appointed Col-
lector of Cus-
toms for the
port of New York in 1871. This position he held until July, 1878,
when he was removed by President Hayes. Again he returned to his
law practice, but was soon called by the voice of his party to be a
standard-bearer in the presidential canvass of 1880. His election to
the vice-presidenc}'' followed, and then, by the death of President
Garfield, he rose to the post of chief honor among the American
people.
The assumption of the duties of his high office by President
Arthur was attended with but little ceremony or formality. On the
22d of September the oath of office was again administered to him in
the Vice-President's room, in the Capitol, Chief-justice Waite officiat-
ing. After this, in the presence of the few who were gathered in
the apartment, he delivered a brief and appropriate address, referring,
CHESTEK A. ARTHUR.
ADMimSTEATIONS OF GARFIELD AND ARTHUR. 653
in a touching manner, to the death of his predecessor. Those present
— inchiding General Grant, ex-President Hayes, Senator Sherman, and
his brother the General of the army — then paid their respects, and
the ceremony was at an end.
In accordance with the custom, the members of the Cabinet, as
constituted so recently by President Garfield, immediately tendered
their resignations. These were not at once accepted, the President in-
stead inviting all of the members to retain their places as his consti-
tutional advisers. For the time all did so except Mr. Windom, Secre-
tary of the Treasury, who was succeeded by Judge Folger, of New
York. Mr. MacYeigh, the Attorney General, also resigned a short time
afterward, and the President appointed as his successor Hon. Benjamin
H. Brewster, of Philadelphia. The next to retire from the Garfield
Cabinet were Mr. Blaine, Secretary of State, and Mr. James, Post-
master General, who were succeeded in their respective offices by Hon.
F. T. Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey, and Hon. Timothy A. Howe, of
"Wisconsin. Mr. Lincoln — so great was the charm of that illustrious
name — remained, as if by common consent, at the head of the Depart-
ment of War. Besides tliose changes in his constitutional advisers,
not much disposition to revolutionize the policy of the Government
was manifested by the new administration ; and the people generally,
vdthout respect to party lines, gave a tolerably cordial support to him
who had been so suddenly called to the chief magistracy of the Union.
From its predecessor the administration of President Arthur in-
herited not a few complications and troubles. The chief of these was
the series of important State trials relating to the alleged Stab Route
Conspiracy. Under the recent conduct of affairs in the Post-office
Department of the Government there liad been organized a class of
fast mail routes, known as the Star Routes, the ostensible object being
to carry the mails with raj)idity and certainty into certain distant and
almost inaccessible portions of the Western States and Territories.
The law governing the letting of mail contracts was of such sort as to
restrict the action of the Postmaster General and his subordinates to
definite limits of expense ; but one clause of the law gave to the De
partment the discretionary power to " expedite " such mail routes a:,
seemed to be weaker and less efficient than the service required. This
gave to certain officers of the Government the opportunity to let the
contracts for many mail lines at a minimum, and then under their dis-
cretionary power to expedite the same lines into efficiency at exorbitant
rates — the end and aim being to divide the spoils with the contractors.
This alleged Star Route conspiracy to defraud the Government was
654 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
unearthed during the Garfield administration, and Attorney General
MacYeigh was directed by the President to prosecute the reputed
conspirators. Indictments were found by the Grand Jury against ex-
United States Senator Stephen W. Dorsey, of Arkansas ; second
assistant Postmaster General Thomas J. Brady, of Indiana, and several
others of less note. Mr. MacVeagh, however, seemed in the conduct
of the Department of Justice to act with little spirit and no success ;
but on the coming into ofiice of Attorney General Brewster, matters
were quickened into sharp activity, and those indicted for conspiracy
were brought to trial. After several weeks of stormy prosecution and
defense, the case went to the jury, who brought in a verdict absurdly
convicting certain subordinates of participating in a conspiracy which
could not have existed without the guilt of their superiors. This
scandal, occupying the public mind in the summer of 1882, contributed
much to the defeat of the Kepublican party in the State elections of
the November following — a defeat so general as to remand by over-
whelming majorities the control of the Congress of the United States
to the Democrats.
The History of Our Country has thus been traced from the
times of the aborigines to the present da3^ The story is done. The
Republic has passed through stormy times, but has at last entered her
Second Century in safety and peace. The clouds that M-ere recently
so black overhead have broken, and are sinking behind the horizon.
The equality of all men before the law has been ^vritten with the iron
pen of war in the constitution of the nation. The union of the States
has been consecrated anew by the blood of patriots and the tears of the
lowly. The temple of freedom reared by our fathers still stands in
undiminished glory. The Past has taught its Lesson ; the
Present has its Duty ; and the Future its Hope.
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CONCLUSION. 655
CHAPTER LXXI.
CONCLUSION.
WHAT, then, of the outlook for the American Republic ? What
shall another century bring forth ? What is to be the destiny
of this vigorous, aggressive, self-governing Anglo-American race?
How will the picture, so well begun, be completed by the annalists
of posterity ? Is it the sad fate of humanity, after all its struggles,
toils, and sighing, to turn forever round and round in the same
beaten circle, climbing the long ascent from the degradation of sav-
age life to the heights of national renown only to descend again
into the fenlands of despair? Is Lord Byron's gloomy picture of
the rise and fall of nations indeed a true portrayal of the order of the
world ? —
Here is the moral of all human tales, —
'Tis but the same rehearsal of the past,
First freedom and then glory — when that fails,
Wealth, vice, corruption, barbarism at last;
And History with all her volumes vast
Hath but (me page !
Or has the human race, breaking the bonds of its servitude and eP'
caping at last from its long imprisonment, struck out across the fields
of sublime possibility the promised pathway leading to the final tri-
umph? There are still doubts and fears — perplexities, anxieties, and
sometimes anguish — arising in the soul of the philanthropist as he
turns his gaze to the future. But there are hopes also, grounds of
confidence, auspicious omens, tokens of the substantial victory of truth,
inspirations of faith welling up in the heart of the watcher as he scans
the dappled horizon of the coming day.
As to present achievement the American people have far sur-
passed the expectations of the fathers. The visions and dreams of the
Revolutionary patriots have been eclipsed by the luster of actual ac-
complishment. The territorial domains of the Republic enclose the
grandest belt of forest, valley, and plain that the world has in it.
Since the beginning of time no other people have possessed such a
territory — so rich in resources, so varied in products, so magnificent
in physical aspect. Soil and climate, the distribution of woods and
656 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
lakes and rivers, the interposition of mountain ranges, and the fertil-
ity of valley and prairie, here contribute to give to man a many-sided
and powerful development. Here he finds bays for his shipping,
rivers for his steamers, fields for his plow, iron for his forge, gold for
his cupidity, landscapes for his pencil, sunshine^enc^ugh for song, and
snow enougl^ for courage. Nor has the Anglo- American failed to profit
by the advantages of his surroundings. He has planted a free gov-
ernment on the largest and most liberal scale known in history. He
has espoused the cause of liberty and right. He has fought like a
hero for the freedom and equality of all men. He has projected a
civilization which, though as yet but dimly traced in outline, is the
vastest and grandest in the world. Better than all, he believes in the
times to come. So long as man is anxious about the future the fu-
ture is secure. Only when he falls into apathy, sleeps at his post, and
cares no longer for the morrow, is the world in danger of relapse and
barbarism. 9 .<S^,
To the thoughtful student of historj'- several things seem neces-
sary to the perpetuity and complete success of American institutions.
The first of these is the prevalence of the Idea of National Uxity.
Of this spake Washington in his Farewell Address, warning his coun-
:rymen in solemn words to preserve and defend that government which
constituted them one people. Of this wrote Hamilton and Adams.
For this pleaded Webster in his great orations. Upon this the far-
seeing statesmen of the present day, rising above the strifes of party
and the turmoils of war, plant themselves as the one thing vital in
American politics. The idea that the United States are one Nation,
and not tliirty-eight nations, is the grand cardinal doctrine of a sound
political faith. State pride and sectional attachment are natural pas-'
sions in the human breast, and are so near akin to patriotism as to be
distinguished from it only in the court of a higher reason. But there
is a nobler love of country — a patriotism that rises above all places
and sections, that knows no County, no State, no North, no South, but
only native land; that claims no mountain slope; that clings to no
river bank; that worships no range of hills; but lifts the aspiring eye
to a continent redeemed from barbarism by common sacrifices and
made sacred by the shedding of kindred blood. Such a patriotism is
the cable and sheet-anchor of our hope.
A second requisite for the preservation of American institutions
is the Universal Secular Education of the People. Monarchies
govern their subjects by authority and precedent ; republics by right
reason and free will. Whether one method or the other will be better.
CONCLUSION. 65/j'
turns wholly upon the intelligence of the governed. If the subject
have not the knowledge and discipline necessary to govern himself, it
is better that a king, in whom some skill in the science of government
is presupposed, should rule him. As between two stupendous evils,
the rational tyranny of the intelligent few is preferable to the furious
and irrational tyranny of the ignorant many. No force which has
moved among men, impelling to bad action, inspiring to crime, over-
turning order, tearing away the bulwarks of liberty and right, and
converting civilization into a waste, has been so full of evil and so
powerful to destroy as a blind, ignorant, and factious democracy. A
republic without intelligence — even a high degree of intelligence — is
a paradox and an impossibility. What means that principle of the
Declaration of Independence which declares the consent of the gov-
erned to be the true foundation of all just authority? What kind of
"consent" is referred to? Manifestly not the passive and unresisting
acquiescence of the mind which, like the potter's clay, receives what-
ever is impressed upon it ; but that active, thinking, resolute, conscious,
personal consent which distinguishes the true freeman from the puppet.
When the people of the United States rise to the heights of this noble
and intelligent self-assertion, the occupation of the party leader — most
despicable of all the tyrants — will be gone forever ; and in order that
the people may ascend to that high plane, the means by which intel-
ligence is fostered, right reason exalted, and a calm and rational pub-
lic opinion produced, must be universally secured. The public Free
School is the fountain whose streams shall make glad all the lands
of liberty. We must educate or perish.
A third thing necessary to the perpetuity of American liberties
is Toleration — toleration in the broadest and most glorious sense.
In the colonial times intolerance embittered the lives of our fathers.
Until the present day the baleful shadow has been upon the land.
The proscriptive vices of the Middle Age have flowed down with the
blood of the race and tainted the life that now is, with a suspicion and
distrust of freedom. Liberty in the minds of men has meant the privi-
lege of agreeing with the majority. Men have desired free thought,
but fear has stood at the door. It remains for the United States to
build a highway, broad and free, into every field of liberal inquiry,
and to make the poorest of men who walks therein, more secure in life
and reputation than the soldier who sleeps behind the rampart. Pro-
scription has no part nor lot in the American system. The stake, the
gibbet, and the rack, thumb-screws, sword, and pillory, have no place
on this side of the sea. Nature is diversified ; so are human faculties,
42
658 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
beliefs, and practices. Essential freedom is the right to differ; and
that right must be sacredly respected. Nor must the privilege of dis-
sent be conceded with coldness and disdain, but openly, cordially, and
with good will. No loss of rank, abatement of character, or ostracism
from society must darken the pathway of the humblest of the seekers
after truth. The right of free thought, free inquiry, and free speech,
is as clear as the noonday and bounteous as the air and ocean. With-
out a full and cheerful recognition of this right, America is only a
name, her glory a dream, her institutions a mockery.
The fourth idea, essential to the welfare and stability of the Re-
public, is THE Nobility of Laboe. It is the mission of the United
States to ennoble toil and honor the toiler. In other lands to labor
has been considered the lot of serfs and peasants; to gather the fruits
and consume them in luxury and war, the business of the great.
Since the medieval times European society has been organized on the
basis of a nobility and a people. To be a nqbleman was to be distin-
guished from the people; to be one of the people was to be forever
debarred from nobility. Thus has been set on human industry the
stigma of perpetual disgrace. Something of this has been transmitted
to the new civilization in the West — a certain disposition to renew
the old order of lord and laborer. Let the odious distinction perish :
the true lord is the laborer and the true laborer the lord. It is the
genius of American institutions, in the fullness of time, to wipe the
last opprobrious stain from the brow of toil and to crown the toiler
with the dignity, luster, and honor of a full and perfect manhood.
The scroll of the century is rolled together. The work is done.
Peace to the memory of the fathers! Green be the graves where
sleep the warriors, patriots, and sages ! Calm be the resting-place of
all the brave and true ! Gentle be the summer rains on famous fields
where armies met in battle ! Forgotten be the animosities and heart-
burnings of the strife ! Sacred be the trusts committed to our care,
and bright the visions of the coming ages !
APPENDIX A.
SIR JOHN MANDEVILLE'S ARGU]MENT ON THE FIGURE
OF THE EARTH.
[Since the paragraph hi the text has been the subject of some doubts and criticisnij,
the original of Sir John Mandeville's argument is liere appended. The orthography
and pliraseology are not more quaint than the logic is invincible. In order that the ar-
gument may be more easily followed and clearly understood, a translation or paraj^hrase,
is added. It must not be forgotten that the date of Sir John's book is 1356 — a hundred
and thirty-six years before the discovery of America by Columbus. — The Author.]
In that Lond, ne in many othere bezonde that, no man may see the Sterre trans-
montane, that is clept the Sterre of the See, that is unmevable, and that is toward the
Northe, that we clepen the Lode Sterre. But men seen another Sterre, the contrarie to
him, that is toward the Southe, that is clept Antartyk. And right as the Schip mere
taken here Avys here, and governe hem be the Lode Sterre, right so don Schip men
bezonde the parties, be the Sterre of the Southe, the whiche Sterre apperethe not to us.
And this Sterre, that is toward the Northe, that wee clepen the Lode Sterre, ne apperethe
not to hem. For whiche cause, men may wel perceyve, that the Lond and the See ben
of rownde schapp and forme. For the partie of the Firmament schewetlie in o Contree,.
that schewethe not in another Contree. And men may well preven be exiDcrience and
sotyle compassement of AVytt, that zif a man fond passages be Schippes, that wolde go
to serchen the World, men myghte go be Schijipe alle aboute the World, and aboven
and benethen. The whiche thing I prove thus, aftre that I have seyn. For I have
ben toward the parties of Braban, and beholden the Astrolabre,* that the Sterre that is
clept the Transmontayne, is 53 Degrees highe. And more forthere in Almayne and.
Bewme, it hathe 58 Degrees. And more forthe toward the parties septemtrioneles, it is
62 Degrees of heghte, and certeyn Mynutes. For I my self have mesured it by thft
Astrolabre. Now schuUe ze knowe, that azen the Transmontayne, is the tother Sterre^
that is clept Antartyke ; as I have seyd before. And tho 2 Sterres ne meeven nevere.
And be hem turnethe alle the Firmament, righte as dothe a Wheel, that turnethe be
his Axille Tree: so that tho Sterres beren the Firmament in 2 egalle parties; so that
it hathe als mochel aboven, as it hathe benethen, Aftre this, I have gon toward the
parties meridionales, that is toward the Southe: and I have founden, that in Lybye,
men seen first the Sterre Antartyk. And so fer I have gon more forthe in tho Contrees,
that I have founde that Sterre more highe ; so that toward the highe Lybye, it is 18
Degrees of heghte, and certeyn Minutes (of the whiche, 60 Minutes maken a Degree).
Aftre goynge be See and be Londe, toward this Contree, of that I have spoke, and to
other Yles and Londes bezonde that Contree, I have founden the Sterre Antartyk of 33
Degrees of heghte, and mo mynutes. And zif I hadde had Companye and Schippynge,
/or to go more bezonde, I trowe wel in certeyn, that wee scholde have seen alle the
*In Mandeville's time, Astronomers had attained but very little accuracy in taking observationffc
659
660 APPENDIX A.
roundnesse of the Firmament alle aboute. ■■'" * * * ■•-■ *' Be the whiche I seve
zou certeynly, that men may envirowne alle the Erthe of alle the World, as wel undre
as aboveii, and turnen azen to his Contree, that hadde Companye and Schippyno-e and
Conduyt: and alle weyes he scholde fynde Men, Londes, and Yles, als wel as in this
Contree. For zee wyten welle, that thei that ben toward the Antartyk, thei ben
streghte, feet azen feet of hem, that dwellen undre transmontane; als wel as wee and
thei that dwellyn under us, ben feet azenst feet. For alle the parties of See and of
Lond han here appositees, habi tables or trepassables, and thei of this half and bezond
Lalf. * *■ ■■■■ * * * And whan men gon bezonde the iourneyes, toward Ynde and
to the foreyn Yles, alle is envyronynge the roundnesse of the Erthe and of the See,
xindre oure Contrees on this half. And therfore hathe it befallen many tynies of o
thing, that I have herd cownted, whan I was zong; how a worthi man departed som-
tyme from oure Contrees, for to go serche the World. And so he passed Ynde, and the
Ties bezonde Ynde, where ben mo than 5000 Yles: and so longe he wente be See and
Lond, and so enviround the World be many seysons, that he fond an Yle, where he
herde speke his owiie Langage, eallynge on Oxen in the Plowghe, suche Wordes as men
speken to Bestes in his owne Contree: whereof he hadde gret Mervayle : for he knewe
not how it myghte be. But I seye, that he had gon so longe, be Londe and be See, tliat
Jie had envyroimd alle the erthe, that he was comen azen envirounynge, that is to seye,
goynge aboute, unto his owne Marches, zif he wolde have passed forthe, til he had
founden his Contree and his owne knouleche. But he turned azen from thens, from
"whens he was come fro; and so he loste moche peynefulle labour, as him self seyde, a
gret while aftre, that he was comen hom. For it befelle aftre, that he wente in to Nor-
"weye; and tliere Tempest of the See toke him; and he arryved in an Yle; and wlian
lie was in that Y''le, he knew wel, that it was the Yle, where he had herd speke his owne
Langage before, and the eallynge of the Oxen at the Plowghe : and that was possible
tiiinge. But how it semcthe to symple men unlerned, that men ne mowe not go undre
the Erthe, and also that men scholde falle toward the Ilevene, from undre! But that
may not be, upon lesse, than wee mowe falle toward Hevene, fro the Erthe, where wee
ben. For fro what partie of the Erthe, that men duelle, outher aboven or benethen, it
semetlic alweys to hem that duellen, that thei gon more righte than ony other folk.
And righte as it semethe to us, that thei ben undre us, righte so it seniethe hem, that
"wee ben undre hem. For zif a man myghte falle fro the Ertlie unto the Firmajnont;
be grettere resoun, the Erthe and the See, that ben so grete and so hevy, scholde fallen
to the Firmament: but that may not be. •■■■ "■■•' ® And alle be it that it be possible
thing, that men may so envyronne alle the World, natheles of a 1000 persones, on ne
myghte not happen to returnen in to his Contree. For, for the gretnesse of the Erthe
and of the See, men may go be a 1000 and a 1000 other weyes, that no man cowde redye
him perfitely toward the parties that he cam fro, but zif it were be aventure and happ, or
be the grace of God. For the Erthe is fiille large and fulle gret, and holt in roundnesse
and aboute envyroun, be aboven and be benethen 20425 Myles, aftre the opynyoun.of
the olde wise Astronomeres. And here Seyenges I repreve noughte. But aftre my lytylle
wytt, it semethe me, savynge here I'everence, that it is more. And for to have bettere
iinderstondynge, I seye thus. Be ther yniagyned a Figure that hathe a gret Compaa;
and aboute the poynt of the gret Compas, that is clept tlie Centre, be made another
litilie Compas: than aftre, be the gret Compas devised be Lines in manye parties; and
that alle the Lynes meeten at the Centre; so that in as many parties, as the grete
Compas schal be departed, in als manye .schalle be departed the litilie, that is aboute
the Centre, alle be it that the spaces ben lesse. Now thanne, be the gret compas
represented for the firmament, and the litilie compas represented for the Erthe. Now
thanne the Firmament is devysed, be Astronomeres, in 12 Signes ; and every Signe is
MANDEVILLE'S ARGUMENT. 661
devysed in 30 Degrees, that is 360 Degrees, that the Firmament hathe aboven. Also,
be tlie Erthe devysed in als many parties, as the Firmament; and lat every partye an-
swere to a Degree of the Firmament: and wytethe it wel, that aftre the Auctoures of
Asti'onoraye, 700 Furlonges of Ertlie answeren to a Degree of the Firmament; and tho
ben 87 Miles and 4 Furlonges. Now be that here multiplyed by 360 sitlies; and thai>
thei ben 31500 Myles, every of 8 Furlonges, aftre Myles of oure Contree. So moclie
liathe the Erthe in roundnesse, and of heghte enviroun, aftre myn opynyoun and mya
andirstondynge.
[paraphrase.] .
In that land and in others beyond no man may see the fixed star of the North which
we call the Lode Star, But there men see another star called the Antarctic, opposite to the
star of the North. And just as mariners in this hemisphere take their reckoning and
govern their course by the North Star, so do the mariners of the South by the Antarctic.
But the star of the North appears not to the people of the South. Wherefore men may
easily perceive that the land and the sea are if round shape and figure. For that part of the
firmament which is seen in one country is not seen in another. And men may prove
both by experience and sound reasoning that if a man, having passage by ship, should
go to search the world, he might with his vessel sail around the world, both above and under it.
This proposition I prove as follows : I have myself in Prussia seen the North Star oy
the astrolabe fifty-three degrees above the horizon. Further on in Bohemia it rises to
the height of fifty-eight degrees. And still farther northward it is sixty-two degrees
and some minutes high. I myself have so measured it. Now the South Pole Star is,
as I have said, opposite the North Pole Star. And about these poles the whole celestial
sphere revolves like a wheel about the axle; and the firmament is thus divided inta
two equal parts. From the North I have turned southward, passed the equator, and
found that in Lybia the Antarctic Star first appears above the horizon. Farther on in
those lands that star rises higher, until in southern Lybia it reaches the height of
eigliteen degrees and certain minutes, sixty minutes making a degree. After going
by sea and by land towards that country [Australia perhaps] of which I have spoken,.
I have found the Antarctic Star more than thirty-tliree degrees above the horizon.
And if I had had company and shipping to go still farther, 1 know of a certidnty thai I should
have seen the ivhole circumference of the heavens. ® * *■ ■'■ ■•■ * And I repeat that men-
may environ the whole world, as well under as above, and return to their own country, if they had
eoinpany, and ships, and conduct. And always, as well as in their own land shall they find
inhabited continents and islands. For know you well that they who dwell in the
southern hemisphere are feet against feet of them who dwell in the northern hemi-
sphere, jus< as we and they that divell under vs are feet to feet. For every part of the sea and
the land hatl\ its antipode. * •■■ ••'" * ■•- Moreover when men go on a journey toward
India and the foreign islands, they do, on the whole route, circle the circumference of
the earth, even to those countries which are under us. And therefore hath that same
thing, which I heard recited when I was young, happened many times. Howbeit, upon
a time, a worthy man departed from our country to explore the world. And so he
passed India and the islands beyond India — more than five thousand in number — and
so long he went by sea and land, environing the world for many seasons, that he found
an island wliere he heard them speaking his own language, hallooing at the oxen in
the plow with the identical words spoken to beasts in his own country. Forsooth, he
was astonished ; for he knew not how the thing might happen. But I assure you that
^62 APPENDIX A.
he had gone so far by land and sea that he had actually gone around the world and
■was come again through the long circuit to his own district. It only remained for him
to go forth and find his particular neighborhood. Unfortunately he turned from the
•coast which he had reached and thereby lost all his painful labor, as he himself after-
Tvards acknowledged when he returned home. For it happened by and by that he
■went into Norway, being driven thither by a storm ; and there he recognized an island
.as being the same in which he had heard men calling the oxen in his own tongue :
and that was a possible thing. And yet it seemeth to simple unlearned rustics that
juen may not go around the world, and if they did they would fall off! But that absurd
thing never could happen unless we ourselves from where we are should fall toward
Jieaven ! For upon what part soever of the earth men dwell, whether above or under,
it always seemeth to them that they walk more perpendicularly than other folks! And
just as it seemeth to us that our antipodes are under us head downwards, just so it
seemeth to them that we are under them head downwards. If a man might fall from
the earth towards heaven, by much more reason the earth itself, being so heavy, should
fall to heaven — an impossible thing. « » « * » Perhaps of a thousand men who
should go around the world, not one might succeed in returning to his own particular
neighborhood. For the earth is indeed a body of great size, its circumference being —
according to the old wise astronomers — twenty tliousand four hundred and twenty-five
miles. And I do not reject their estimates; but according to my judgment, saving their
reverence, the circumference of the earth is somewhat more than that. And in order to have
a clearer understanding of the matter, I use the following demonstration: Let there be
imagined a great sphere and about the point called the center another smaller sphere.
Then from different parts of the great sphere let lines be drawn meeting at the center.
It is clear that by this means the two spheres will be divided into an equal number of
parts having the same relation to each other; but between the divisions on the smaller
sphere the absolute space will be less. Now the great sphei'e represents the heavens
and the smaller sphere the earth. But the firmament is divided by astronomers into
twelve Signs, and each Sign into thirty degrees, making three hundred and sixty de-
grees in all. On the surface of the earth there will be of course, divisions exactly cor-
responding to those of the celestial sphere, every line, degree and zone of the latter
answering to a line, degree or zone of the former. And now know well that according
to the authors of astronomy^' seven hundred furlongs, or eighty-seven miles and four fur-
longs, answer to a degree of the firmament. Multiplying eighty-seven and a half miles
by three hundred and sixty — the number of degrees in the firmament — we have thirty-
one thousand five hundred English miles. And this according to my belief and dem-
onstration is the true measurement of the circumference of the earth.
'■''An everlasting shame be to the " olde wise Astronomeres " ! If they had given Sir John the cor-
rect meftsurement of a degree of latitude, he would not have missed the circumference of the world
by as much as ten miles! Kis argtiment is absolutely correct. This, too, in A. D. 1356.
APPENDIX B.
A PLAN OF PERPETUAL UNION,
FOR
HIS majesty's colonies in north AMERICA:
PKOPOSED BY BENJ. FEANKLIN,
AND
Adopted by the CoLONiAii Convention at Albany, July 10th, 1754.
[This document will be found of special interest as containing the germ of the
Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States. It should be
remembered that this " Plan of Union," though adopted by the Congress at Albany —
only the delegates from Connecticut dissenting — was rejected both by the colonial
assemblies and the British Board of Trade, — by the former as being too despotic a
constitution and by the latter as a piece of high-handed presumption. — The Author.]
That the general government of His Majesty's Colonies in North America be
administered by a President-General, to be appointed and sujiported by the crown ; and
a Grand Council, to be chosen by the representatives of the people of the several colonies
met in their respective Assemblies ;
Who shall meet for the first time at the city of Philadelphia, in Pennsylvania, being
called by the President-General as soon as conveniently may be after his appointment;
That there shall be a new election of the members of the Grand Council every three
years ; and on the death or resignation of any member, his place should be supplied by a
new choice at the next sitting of the Assembly of the colony he represented ;
That after the first three years, when the proportion of money arising out of each
colony to the general treasury can be known, the number of members to be chosen for
each colony shall from time to time, in all ensuing elections, be regulated by that propor-
tion, yet so as that the number to be chosen by any one province be not more than seven,
nor less than two ;
That the Grand Council shall meet once in every year, and oftener if occasion require,
at such time and place as they shall adjourn to at the last preceding meeting, or as they
«hall be called to meet at by the President-General on any emergency ; he having first
obtained in writing the consent of seven of the members to such call, and sent due and
timely notice to the whole ;
That the Grand Council have power to choose their speaker; and shall neither be
dissolved, prorogued, nor continued sitting longer than six weeks at one time, without
their own consent or the special command of the crown ;
That the members of the Grand Council shall be allowed for their service ten shil-
lings per diem, during their session and journey to and from the place of meeting; twenty
miles to be reckoned a day's journey;
That the assent of the President-General be requisite to all acts of the Grand
Council, and that it be his ofiice and duty to cause them to be carried into execution ;
That the President-General, with the advice of the Grand Council, hold or direct all
663
664 FRANKLIN'S CONSTITUTION.
Indian treaties, in which the general interest of the colonies may be concerned ; an^
make peace or declare war with Indian nations ;
That they make such laws as they judge necessary for regulating all Indian trade ;
Tliat they make all purchases, from Indians for the crown, of lands not now within
the bounds of particular colonies, or that shall not be within tlieir bounds, when some of
them are reduced to more convenient dimensions;
That they make new settlements on such purchases, by granting lands in the king's
name, reserving a quit-rent to the crown for the use of the general treasury ;
That they make laws for regulating and governing such new settlements, till the
crown shall think fit to form them into particular governments;
TJiat they raise and pay soldiers and build forts for the defence of any of the colo-
nies, and equip vessels of force to guard the coasts and protect the trade on the ocean,
lakes, or great rivers; but they shall not impress men in any colony, without the consent
of the legislature ;
That for these purposes they have power to make laws, and lay and levy such
general duties, imposts, or taxes, as to them shall appear most equal and just (considering,
the ability and other circumstances of the inhabitants in the several colonies,) and such
as maybe collected with the least inconvenience to the people; rather discouraging luxury,
than loading industry with unnecessary burthens ;
That they may appoint a General Treasurer and Particular Treasurer in each gov-
ernment, when necessary; and from time to time may order the sums in the treasuries of
each government into the general treasury, or draw on them for special payments, as they
find most convenient ;
Yet no money to issue but by joint orders of the President-General and Grand
Council ; except where sums have been appropriated to particular purposes, and
the President-General is previously empowered by an act to draw such sums;
Tliat the general accounts shall be yearly settled and reported to the several
Assemblies ;
That a quorum of the Grand Council, empowered to act with the President-Genwral,,
do consist of twenty-five members; among whom there shall be one or more from a ma-
jority of the colonies ;
That tlie laws made by them for the purposes aforesaid shall not be repugnant, but,
as near as may be, agreeable to the laws of England, and shall be transmitted to the
King in Council for approbation, as soon as may be after their passing; and if not disap-
proved witliin three years after presentation, to remain in force ;
That, in case of the death of the President-General, the Speaker of the Grand Council
for the time being shall succeed, and be vested with the same powers and authorities to
continue till the King's pleasure be know;
That all military commission officers, whether for land or sea service, to act under
this general constitution, shall be nominated by the President-General ; but the appro-
bation of the Grand Council is to be obtained, before they receive their commissions; and
all civil officers are to be nominated by the Grand Council, and to receive the President-
General's approbation before they officiate ;
But, in case of vacancy by death or removal of any officer civil or military under
this constitution, the Governor of the province in which such vacancy happens, may
appoint, till the pleasure of the President-General and Grand Council can be known ;
That the particular military as well as civil establishments in each colony remain
in their present state, the general constitution notwithstanding; and that on sudden
emergencies any colony may defend itself; and lay the accounts of expense thence
arising before the President-General and General Council, who may allow and order
payment of the same, as far as they judge such accounts just and reasonable.
APPENDIX a
THE DECLAEATION OF INDEPENDENCE,
Adopted by Congress, July 4, 1776.
A DECLARATION BY THE EEPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA, IN CONGRESS ASSEMBLED.
When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve
the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the
powers of the earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of
nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that thev
should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
We hold these ti-uths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal ; that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that, to secure these rights, governments are insti-
tuted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed ; that,
whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the
people to altec'or abolish it, and to institute a new government, laying its foundation on
such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most
likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that govern-
ments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and, accord-
ingly, all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, wliile evils
are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to wliich they are accus-
tomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same
object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is
their duty, to throw off such a government, and to provide new guards for tlieir future
security. Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and sucli is now the
necessity which constrains them to alter tlieir former systems of government. The histoxy
of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all
having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these States. To
prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world : —
He has refused his assent to laws the most wholesome and necessary for the public
good.
He has forbidden his governors to pass laws of immediate and jiressing importance,
unless suspended in their operations, till his assent should be obtained ; and, when so
suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.
He has refused to pass other laws for the accommodation of large districts of peojile,
unless those people would relinquish the right of representation in the legislature; a
right inestimable to them, and formidable to tyrants only.
He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and dis-
tant from tiie repository of their public records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them
into compliance with his measures.
665
•QQe DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE.
He has dissolved representative houses repeatedly for opposing, with manly firmness,
his invasions on the rights of the people.
He has refused, for a long time after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected;
■whereby the legislative powers, incapable of annihilation, have returned to the people at
large, for their exercise ; the State remaining, in the mean-time, exposed to all the dan-
gers of invasions from without, and convulsions within.
He has endeavored to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose,
obstructing the laws for the naturalization of foreigners ; refusing to pass others to
encourage their migration hither, and raising the conditions of new appropriations
of lands.
He has obstructed the administration of justice by refusing his assent to laws for
.establishing judiciary powers.
He has made judges dependent on his will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and
the amount and payment of their salaries.
He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers, to harasa
■our people, and eat out their substance.
He has kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies, without the consent of
our legislatures.
He has affected to render the military independent of, and superior to, the civil power.
He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our consti-
tution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his assent to their acts of pretended
legislation : —
For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us;
For protecting them, by mock trial, from punishment for any murders which they
should commit on the inhabitants of these States ;
For cutting off our trade with nil parts of the world ;
For imjDosing taxes on us without our consent ;
For depriving us, in many cases, of tlie benefits of trial by jury;
For transporting us beyond seas to be tried for pretended offences ;
For abolishing the free system of English laws in a neighboring province, establish-
ing therein an arbitrary government, and enlarging its boundaries, so as to render it at
once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these
Colonies ;
For taking away our charters, abolishing our most valuable laws, and altering, funda-
mentally, the j)owers of our governments ;
For suspending our own legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power
to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.
He has abdicated government here, by declaring us out of his protection, and waging
war against us.
He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burned our towns, and destroyed
lie lives of our people.
•J^ He is at this time transporting large armies of foreign mercenaries to complete the
works of death, desolation, and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of cruelty and
perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the head of
a civilized nation.
He has constrained our fellow-citizens, taken captive on the high seas, to bear arms
against their country, to become the executioners of their friends and brethren, or to fall
themselves by their hands.
He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavored to bring on
the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian savages, whose known rule of war-
fare is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes, and conditions.
APPENDIX a 667
In every stage of these oppressions, we have petitioned for redress in the most hum-
tie terms ; our repeated petitions have been answered by rei^eated injury. A prince
whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be
the ruler of a free people.
Nor have we been wanting in attentions to our British brethren. We have warned
them, from time to time, of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable
jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and
settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we
have conjured them, by the ties of our common kindred, to disavow these usurpations,
which would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They, too, have
been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in
the necessity, which denounces our separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of
mankind, enemies in war ; in peace, friends.
We, therefore, the representatives of the United States of Amekica, in general
congress assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of
our intentions, do, in the name and by the authority of the good people of these Colo-
nies, solemnly publish and declare, that these United Colonies are, and of right ought to
be, F)-ee and Independent States ; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British
ci'own, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is,
and ought to be, totally dissolved ; and that, as Free and Independent States, they have
full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do
all other acts and things which Independent States may of right do. And for the support
of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we
mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.
John Hancock.
New Hampshire. — Josiah Bartlett, William Whipple, Matthew Thornton.
Masschusetts Bay. — Samuel Adams, John Adams, Eobert Treat Paine, Elbridge
•Gerry.
Ehode Island, etc. — Stephen Hopkins, William Ellery.
Connecticut. — Roger Sherman, Samuel Huntington, William Williams, Oliver
W^olcott.
New York. — William Floyd, Philip Livingston, Francis Lewis, Lewis Morris.
New Jersey. — Richard Stockton, John Witherspoon, Francis Hopkinson, John
Hart, Abraham Clark.
Pennsylvania. — Robert Morris, Benjamin Rush, Benjamin Franklin, John Morton,
George Clymer, James Smith, George Taylor, James Wilson, George Ross.
Delaware. — Ca>sar Rodney, George Read, Thomas M'Kean.
Maryland. — Samuel Chase, William Paca, Thomas Stone, Charles Carroll of
Carrollton.
Virginia. — George Wythe, Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Har-
rison, Thomas Nelson, Jr., Francis Lightfoot Lee, Carter Braxton.
North Carolina. — William Hooper, Joseph Hewes, John Penn.
South Carolina. — Edward Rutledge, Thomas Hayward, Jr., Thomas Lynch, Jr.,
Arthur Middleton.
Georgia. — Button Gwinnett, Lyman Hall, George Walton.
APPENDIX D.
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION.
[The Articles of Confederation were drawn up by a committee of gentlemen, whO'
■were appointed by Congress for this purpose, June 12, 177G, and finally adopted, No-
vember 15, 1777. The committee were Messrs. Bartlett, Samuel Adams, Hopkins, Sher-
man, E. R. Livingston, Dickinson, M'Kean, Stone, Nelson, Howes, E. Eutledge, and
Gwinnet.]
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION AND PERPETUAL UNION.
Between the States of Neiv Hampshire, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island a7id Providence Plan-
tations, Connecticut, Xew York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia,
North Carolina, Soidh Carolina, and Georgia.
ARTICLE I.
The style of this confederacy shall be, " The Uotted States of America."
ARTICLE II.
Each State retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every jDower,
jurisdiction, and right, Avhich is not by this confederation expressly delegated to the United
States in Congress assembled.
ARTICLE III.
The said States hereby severally entei- into a firm league of friendship witii eacl)
otlier, for their common defence, the security of their liberties, and their mutual and
general welfare, binding themselves to assist each other against all force ofTered to, or
attacks made upon them, or any of them, on account of religion, sovereignty, trade, or
any other pretence whatever.
ARTICLE IV.
Section 1. — The better to secure and perpetuate mutual friendship and intercourse
among the people of the different States in this union, tlie free inhabitants of each of
these States — paupers, vagabonds, and fugitives from justice excepted — shall be entitled
to all privileges and immunities of free citizens in the several States; and the people of
each State shall have free ingress and egress to and from any other State, and shall
enjoy therein all tlie privileges of trade and commerce, subject to the same duties,
impositions, and restrictions, as the inliabitants thereof respectively; provided, tliat
such restrictions shall not extend so far as to prevent the removal of property imported
into any State, to any other State, of Avhich the owner is an inhabitant; provided also,
tiiat no imposition, duties, or restriction, sliall be laid by any State on the pro[)erly of
tlie LTnited States, or either of them.
Sec. 2. — If any pei-son, guilty of, or charged with treason, felony, or other high
misdemeanor, in any State, shall flee from justice, and be found in any of the United
States, he shall, upon the demand of tlie Governor or executive power of the State
from which he fled, be delivered up and removed to the State having jurisdiction of his-^
ofience.
668
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION. . 669
Sec. 3. Full faith and credit shall he given, in each of these States, to the records,
acts, and judicial proceedings of the courts and magistrates of every other State.
ARTICLE V.
Section 1. — For the more convenient management of the general interests of the
United States, delegates shall be annually appointed in such manner as the legislature
of each State shall direct, to meet in Congress on the first Monday in November in every
year, with a power reserved to each State to recall its delegates, or any of them, at any
time within the year, and to send others in their stead, for the remainder of the year.
Sec. 2. — No State shall be represented in Congress by less than two, nor more than
seven members ; and no jierson shall be capable of being a delegate for more than three
years, in any term of six years; nor shall any person, being a delegate, be capable of
holding any office under the United States, for which he, or any other for his benefit,
receives any salary, fees, or emolument, of any kind.
Sec. 3. — Each State shall maintain its own delegates in a meeting of the States, and
while they act as members of the committee of these States.
Sec. 4. — In determining questions in the United States in Congress assembled, each
State shall have one vote.
Sec. 5. — Freedom of speech and debate in Congress shall not be impeached or
questioned in any court or place out of Congress, and the members of Congress shall be
protected in their persons from ai-rests and imprisonments during the time of their
going to and from, and attendance on Congress, except for treason, felony, or breach of
the peace.
ARTICLE VI.
•
Section 1. — No State, without the consent of the United States in Congress assem-
bled, shall send any embassy to, or receive any embassy from, or enter into any confer-
■ence, agreement, alliance, or treaty with any king, prince, or State, nor shall any pei*son
holding any office of profit or trust under the United States, or any of them, accept of
any present, emolument, office, or title, of any kind whatever, from any king, prince, or
foreign state ; nor shall the United States in Congress assembled, or any of them, grant
any title of nobility.
Sec. 2. — No two or more States shall enter into any treaty, confederation, or alli-
.ance whatever, between them, without the consent of the United States in Congress
assembled, specifying accurately the purposes for which the same is to be entered into,
and how long it shall continue.
Sec. 3.— No Slate shall lay any imposts or duties which may interfere with any
stipulations in treaties entered into by the United States in Congress assembled, with any
king, prince, or State, in pursuance of any treaties already proposed by Congress to the
courts of France and Spain.
Sec. 4.— No vessels of war shall be kept up in time of peace by any State, except
such number only as shall be deemed necessary by the United States in Congress assem-
bled, for the defence of such State, or its trade; nor shall any body of forces be kept up
by any State, in time of peace, except such number only as, in the judgment of the United
States in Congress assembled, shall be deemed requisite to garrison the forts necessary for
the defence of such State ; but every State shall always keep up a well-regulated and
disciplined militia, sufficiently armed and accoutred, and shall provide and constantly
have ready for use, in public stores, a due number of field-pieces and tents, and a proper
quantity of arms, ammunition, and camp equipage.
Sec. 5.— No State shall engage in any war without the consent of the United States
in Congress assembled, unless such State be actually invaded by enemies, or shall have
deceived certain advice of a resolution being formed by some nation of Indians to invade
670 APPENDIX D.
Buch State, and the danger is so imminent as not to admit of delay till the United States:
in Congress assembled can be consulted ; nor shall any State grant commissions to any
ships or vessels of war, nor letters of marque or reprisal, except it be after a declaration
of war by the United States in Congress assembled, and then only against the kingdom.
or State, and the subjects thereof, against which war has been so declared, and under sucK
regulations as shall be established by the United States in Congress assembled, unless
such State be infested by pirates, in which case vessels of war may be fitted out for that
occasion, and kept so long as the danger shall continue, or until the United States in
Congress assembled shall determine otherwise.
ARTICLE vn.
When land forces are raised by any State for the common defence, all officers of or
under the rank of colonel, shall be appointed by the legislature of each State respect-
ively by whom such forces shall be raised, or in such manner as such State shall direct,,
and all vacancies shall be filled up by the State which first made the appointment.
ARTICLE vin.
All charges of war, and all other expenses that shall be incurred for the common
defence or general welfare, and allowed by the United States in Congress assembled,
shall be defrayed out of a common treasury, which shall be supplied by the several
States, in proportion to the value of all land within each State, granted to or surveyed
for any person, as such land and the buildings and improvements thereon shall be esti-
mated, according to such mode as the United States in Congress assembled shall, from
time to time, direct and appoint. The taxes for paying that proportion shall be laid
and levied by the authority and direction of the legislatures of the several States within .
the time agreed upon by the United States in Congress assembled.
ARTICLE IX,
Section 1. — The United States in Congress assembled shall have the sole and
exclusive right and power of determining on peace and war, except in the cases men-
tioned in the sixth article, of sending and receiving ambassadors ; entering into treaties
and alliances, provided that no treaty of commerce shall be made, whereby the legisla-
tive power of the respective States shall be restrained from imposing such imposts and
duties on foreigners, as their own people are subjected to, or from prohibiting the
exportation or importation of any species of goods or commodities whatsoever; of
establishing rules for deciding in all cases what captures on land or water shall be legal,
and in what manner prizes taken by land or naval forces in the service of the United
States shall be divided or appropriated ; of granting letters of marque and reprisal in
times of peace; appointing courts for the trial of piracies and felonies committed on
the high seas ; and establishing courts for receiving and determining finally appeals in
all cases of capture; provided that no member of Congress shall be ajipointed a judge
of any of the said courts.
Sec. 2. — The United States in Congress assembled shall also be the last resort on
appeal in all disputes and differences now subsisting, or that hereafter may arise between
two or more States concerning boundary, jurisdiction, or any other cause whatever;
which authority shall always be exercised in the manner following: Whenever the
legislative or executive authority or lawful agent of any State in controversy with
another, shall present a petition to Congress, stating the matter in question, and pray-
ing for a hearing, notice thereof shall be given by order of Congress to the legislative
or executive authority of the other State in controversy, and a day assigned for the
appearance of the: parties by their lawful agents, who shall then be directed to appoint,.
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION. 671
by joint consent, commissioners or judges to constitute a court for hearing and deter-
mining the matter in question ; but if they can not agree, Congress sliall name three
persons out of each of the United States, and from the list of sucli persons each party
shall alternately stril^e out one, the petitioners beginning, until the number shall be
reduced to thirteen ; and from that number not less than seven, nor more than nine
names, as Congress shall direct, shall, in the presence of Congress, be drawn out by lot;,
and the persons whose names shall be so drawn, or any five of them, shall be commis-
sioners or judges to hear and finally determine the controversy, so always as a major
part of the judges, who shall hear the cause, shall agree in the determination : and if
(either party shall neglect to attend at the day appointed, without showing reasons
■which Congress shall judge sufficient, or being present, shall refuse to strike, the Con-
gress shall proceed to nominate three persons out of each State, and the secretary of
Congress shall strike in behalf of such party absent or refusing ; and the judgment and
sentence of the court, to be appointed in the manner before prescribed, shall be final
and conclusive ; and if any of the parties shall refuse to submit to the authority of such-
court, or to appear or defend their claim or cause, the court shall nevertheless proceed
to pronounce sentence, or judgment, which shall in like manner be final and decisive ; the
judgment or sentence and other proceedings being in either case transmitted to Congress,.
and lodged among the acts of Congress, for the security of the parties concerned : pro-
vided that every commissioner, before he sits in judgment, shall take an oath, to be-
administered by one of the judges of the supreme or superior court of the State where the
cause shall be tried, " well and truly to hear and determine the matter in question, according
to the best of his judgment, without favor, affection, or hope of reward." Provided, also^
that no State shall be deprived of territory for the benefit of the United States.
Sec. 3. — All controversies concerning the private right of soil claimed under dif-
ferent grants of two or more States, whose jurisdiction, as they may respect such lands,.
and the States which passed such grants are adjusted, the said grants or either of them
being at the same time claimed to have originated antecedent to such settlement of
jurisdiction, shall, on the petition of either party to the Congress of the United States,
be finally determined, as near as may be, in the same manner as is before prescribed for
deciding disputes respecting territorial jui-isdiction between difierent States.
Sec. 4. — The United States in Congress assembled shall also have the sole and,
exclusive right and power of regulating the alloy and value of coin struck by their own
authority, or by that of the respective States; fixing the standard of weights and meas-
ures throughout the United States; regulating the trade, and managing all affairs with
the Indians, not members of any of the States ; provided that the legislative right of
any State, within its own limits, be not infringed or violated ; establishing and regu-
lating post ofl5ces from one State to another throughout all the United States, and
exacting such postage on the papers passing through the same, as may be requisite ta
defray the expenses of the said office ; appointing all officers of the land forces in the
service of the United States, excepting regimental officers; appointing all the officers
of the naval forces, and commissioning all officers whatever in the service of the United
States ; making rules for the government and regulation of the said land and naval
forces, and directing their operations.
Sec. 5.— The United States in Congress assembled shall have authority to appoint
a committee to sit in the recess of Congress, to be denominated, "J. Committee of the
States," and to consist of one delegate from each State; and to appoint such other com-
mittees and civil officers as may be necessary for managing the general affairs of the
United States under their direction; to appoint one of their number to preside; pro-
vided that no person be allowed to serve in the office of president more than one year
in any term of three years ; to ascertain the necessary sums of money to be raised for
1^72 APPENDIX D.
the service of the United States, and to appropriate and apply the same for defraying
the public expenses; to borrow money or emit bills on the credit of the United States,
transmitting every half-year to the respective States an account of the sums of money
so borrowed or emitted ; to build and equip a navy ; to agree upon the number of land
forces, and to make requisitions from each State for its quota, in proportion to the
jiumber of white inhabitants in such State, which requisition shall be binding; and
thereupon the legislature of each State shall appoint the regimental officers, raise the
men, clothe, arm, and equip -them, in a soldier-like manner, at the expense of the
United States; and the officers and men bo clothed, armed, and equipped, shall march
to the place appointed, and within the time agreed on by the United States in Congress
assembled ; but if the United States in Congress assembled shall, on consideration of
circumstances, judge proper that any State should not raise men, or should raise a
smaller number than its quota, and that any other State should raise a greater number
of men than the quota thereof, such extra number shall be raised, officered, clothed,
armed, and equipped, in the same manner as the quota of such State, unless the legis-
lature of such State shall judge that such extra number can not be safely spared out of
the same, in which case they shall raise, officer, clothe, arm, and equip, as many of such
extra number as they judge can be safely spared, and the officers and men so clothed,
armed, and equipped, shall march to the place appointed, and within the time agreed
on by the United States in Congress assembled.
Sec. 6. — The United States in Congress assembled shall never engage in a war, nor
grant letters of marque and reprisal in time of peace, nor enter into any treaties or
alliances, nor coin money, nor regulate the value thereof, nor ascertain the sums and
■expenses necessary for the defence and welfare of the United States, or any of them,
nor emit bills, nor borrow money on the credit of the United States, nor appropriate
money, nor agree upon the number of vessels of war to be built or purchased, or the
number of land or sea forces to be raised, nor appoint a commander-in-chief of the
army or navy, unless nine States assent to the same : nor shall a question on any other
point, except for adjourning from day to day, be determined, unless by the votes of a
majority of the United States in Congress assembled.
Sec. 7. — The Congress of the United States shall have power to adjourn to any
time within the year, and to any place within the United States, so that no period of
adjournment be for a longer duration than the space of six months, and shall publish
the journal of their proceedings monthly, except such parts thereof relating to treaties,
alliances, or military operations, as in their judgment require secrecy ; and the yeas
and nays of the delegates of each State, on any question, shall be entered on the journal,
when it is desii-ed by any delegate ; and the delegates of a State, or any of them, at his
or their request, shall be furnislied with a transcript of the said journal, except such
parts as are above excepted, to lay before the legislatures of the several States.
ARTICLE X.
The Committee of the States, or any nine of them, shall be authorized to execute,
in the recess of Congress, such of the jiowers of Congress as the United States, in Con-
gress assembled, by the consent of nine States, shall, from time to time, think expedient
lo vest them with ; provided that no power be delegated to the said committee, for the
exercise of which, by the Articles of Confederation, the voice of nine States, in the
Congress of the United States assembled, is requisite.
ARTICLE XI.
Canada, acceding to this Confederation, and joining in the measures oi the United
i5tates, shall be admitted into and entitled to all the advantages of this Union: But
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION. 673
no other colony shall be admitted into the same, unless such admission be agreed to^yf
nine States.
ARTICLE xn.
All bills of credit emitted, moneys borrowed, and debts contracted by or under the
authority of Congress, before the assembling of the United States, in pursuance of the
present Confederation, shall be deemed and considered as a charge against tlie United
States, for payment anu satisfaction whereof the said United States and the public faith
»re hereby solemnly pledged.
ARTICLE xm.
Every State shall abide by the determination of the United States in Congress
assembled, in all questions which by this Confederation are submitted to them. And
the articles of this Confederation shall be inviolably observed by every State, and
the union shall be perpetual ; nor shall any alteration at any time hereafter be made in
any of them ; unless such alteration be agreed to in a Congress of the United States,
and be afterwards confirmed by the legislature of every State.
And whereas it hath pleased tlie great Governor of the world to incline the hearts
of the legislatures we respectively represent in Congress to approve of, and to authorize
us to ratify the said Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, Know ye, that we,
the undersigned delegates, by virtue of the power and authority to us given for that
purpose, do by these presents, in the name and in behalf of our respective constituents,
fully and entirely ratify and confirm each and every of the said Articles of Confed-
eration and Perpetual Union, and all and singular the matters and things therein con-
tained. And we do further solemnly plight and engage the faith of our respective
constituents, that they shall abide by the determinations of the United States in Con-
gress assembled, in all questions which by the said Confederation are submitted to
them; and that the articles thereof shall be inviolably observed by the States we
respectively represent, and that the union shall be perpetual In witness whereof we
have hereunto set our hands in Congress.
Done at Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, the 9th day of July, in the year of our Lord
1778, and in the third year of the Lidependence of Amei-ica.
New Hampshire. — Josiah Bartlett, John Wentworth, Jr.
Massachusetts Bay.— John Hancock, Samuel Adams, Elbridge Gerry, Francis
Dana, James Lovel, Samuel Holton.
Khode IsiLAND, ETC. — William Ellery, Henry Marchant, John Collins.
Connecticut.— Roger Sherman, Samuel Huntington, Oliver Wolcott, Titus Hos-
mer, Andrew Adams.
New York.— James Duane, Francis Lewis, William Duer, Gouverneur Morris.
New Jersey. — John Witherspoon, Nath. Scudder.
Pennsylvania.— Robert Morris, Daniel Roberdeau, Jona Bayard Smith, William
Clingan, Joseph Reed.
Delaware.— Thomas M'Kean, John Dickinson, Nicholas Van Dyke.
Maryland. — John Hanson, Daniel Carroll.
Virginia. — Richard Henry Lee, John Banister, Thomas Adams, John Harvie,
Francis Lightfoot Lee.
North Carolina. — John Penn, Cons. Harnett, John Williams.
South Carolina.— Henry Laurens, Wm. Henry Drayton, John Matthews, Richard
Hutson, Tliomas Heyward, Jr.
Georgia.— John Walton, Edward Telfair, Edward Langworthy.
43
appe:n^dix e.
CONSTITUTIOiS' OF THE UNITED STATES.
We, the People of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish
juBtice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defence, promote the gen-
eral welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain
and establish this Constitution for the United States of North America.
ARTICLE I.
Section 1. — All legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in a Con-
gress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Repre-
eentatives.
Sec. 2. — The House of Representatives shall be composed of members chosen
every second year by the people of the several States, and the electors in each State
Bhall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the
State legislature.
No person shall be a representative who shall not have attained to the age of
twenty-five years, and been seven years a citizen of the United States, and who shall
not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.
Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several States
which may be included within this Union, according to their respective numbers, which
shall be determined by adding to the whole number of free persons, including those
bound to service for a term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three-fifths of
all other persons. The actual enumeration shall be made within three years after the
first meeting of the Congress of the United States, and within every subsequent term of
ten years, in such manner as they shall by law direct. The number of representatives
shall not exceed one for every thirty thousand ; but each State shall have at least one
representative; and until such enumeration shall be made, the State of New Hampshire
Bhall be entitled to choose three, Massachusetts, eight, Rhode Island and Providence
Plantations, one, Connecticut, five, New York, six, New Jersey, four, Pennsylvania,
eight, Delaware, one, Maryland, six, Virginia, ten, North Carolina, five, South Carolina,
five, and Georgia, three.
When vacancies happen in the representation from any State, the executive
authority thereof shall issue writs of election to fill such vacancies.
The House of Representatives shall choose their speaker and other oflBcers; and
shall have the sole power of impeachment.
Sec. 3. — The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two senators from
each State, chosen by the legislature thereof, for six years ; and each senator shall have
one vote.
Immediately after they shall be assembled in consequence of the first election,
they shall be divided, as equally as may be, into three classes. The seats of the
senators of the first class shall be vacated at the expiration of the second year, of the
674
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. 675
Becond class, at the expiration of the fourth year, and of the third class at the expira-
tion of the sixth year, so that one-third may be chosen every second year; and if
vacancies happen, by resignation or otherwise, during the recess of the legislature of
any State, the executive thereof may make temporary appointments until the next
meeting of the legislature, which shall then fill such vacancies.
No person shall be a senator who shall not have attained to the age of thirty years,
and been nine years a citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be
an inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen.
The Vice-President of the United States shall be president of the Senate, but shall
have no vote, unless they be equally divided.
The Senate shall choose their other oflBcers, and also a president jyro tempore, in the
absence of the Vice-President, or when he shall exercise the office as President of the
United States.
The Senate shall have the sole power to try all impeachments. When sitting for
that purpose, they shall be on oath or affirmation. "When the President of the United
States is tried, the chief-justice shall preside ; and no person shall be convicted '^fithout
the concurrence of two-thirds of the members present.
Judgment, in cases of impeachment, shall not extend further than to removal from
office, and disqualification to hold and enjoy any office of honor, trust, or profit under
the United States ; but the party convicted shall, nevertheless, be liable and subject to
indictment, trial, judgment, and punishment, according to law.
Sec. 4. — The times, places, and manner of holding elections for senators and rep-
resentatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the legislature thereof; but the Con-
gress may, at any time, by law, make or alter such regulations, except as to the places
of choosing senators.
The Congress shall assemble at least once in every year; and such meeting
shall be on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by law appoint a dif-
ferent day.
Sec. 5.— Each house shall be the judge of the elections, returns, and qualifications
of its own members ; and a majority of each shall constitute a quorum to do business;
but a smaller number may adjourn from day to day, and may be authorized to compel
the attendance of absent members, in such manner and under such penalties as each
house may provide.
Each house may determine the rules of its proceedings, punish its members for
disorderly behavior, and, with the concurrence of two-thirds, expel a member.
Each house shall keep a journal of its proceedings, and from time to time publish
the same, excepting such parts as may in their judgment require secrecy; and the yeas
and nays of the members of either house, on any question, shall, at the desire of one-
fifth of those present, be entered on the journal.
Neither house, during the session of Congress, shall, without the consent of the
other, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other place than that in which the
two houses shall be sitting.
Sec. 6.— The senators and representatives shall receive a compensation for their
services, to be ascertained by law, and paid out of the treasury of the United States.
They shall, in all cases except treason, felony, and breach of the peace, be privileged
from arrest during their attendance on the session of their respective houses, and in
going to and returning from the same ; and, for any speech or debate in either house,
they shall not be questioned in any other place.
No senator or representative shall, during the time for which he was elected, be
appointed to any civil office under the authority of the United States which shall have
been created, or the emoluments whereof shall have been increased, during such time;
676 APPENDIX E.
and no person holding any office under the United States shall be a member of eithtr
house during his continuance in office.
Sec. 7. — All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of E«presenta-
tives ; but the Senate may propose or concur with amendments, as on other bills.
Every bill which shall have passed the House of Kepresentatives and the Senate,
shsill, before it become a law, be presented to the President of the United States ; if he
approve he shall sign it. but if not he shall return it, with his objections, to that house
in which it shall have originated, who shall enter the objections at large on their
journal, and proceed to reconsider it. If, after such reconsideration, two-thirds of that
house shall agree to pass the bill, it shall be sent, together with the objections, to the
other house, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and, if approved by two-thirds
of that house, it shall become a law. But, in all such cases, the votes of both houses
shall be determined by yeas and nays ; and the names of the persons voting for and
against the bill shall be entered on the journal of each house respectively. If any bill
shall not be returned by the President within ten days (Sundays excepted) after it shall
have been presented to him, the same shall be a law in like manner as if he had signed
it, unless the Congress by their adjournment prevent its return, in which case it shall
not be a law.
Every order, resolution, or vote, to which the concurrence of the Senate and House
of Representatives may be necessary (except on a question of adjournment), shall be
presented to the President of the United States ; and, before the same shall take effect,
shall be approved by him, or, being disapproved by him, shall be repassed by two-
thirds of the Senate and House of Representatives, according to the rules and limita-
tions prescribed in the case of a bill.
Sec. 8. — The Congress shall have power : —
To lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts, and pr(>vide
for the common defence and general welfare, of the United States ; but all duties,
imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States :
To borrow money on the credit of the United States :
To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and
with the Indian tribes :
To establish an uniform rule of naturalization, and uniform laws on the subject ol
bankruptcies throughout the United States:
To coin money, regulate the value thereof, and of foreign coin, and fix the standard
of weights and measures:
To provide for the punishment of counterfeiting the securities and current coin of
the United States :
To establish post-offices and post-roads :
To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited
times, to authors and inventors, the exclusive right to their respective writings and
discoveries :
To constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court :
To define and punish piracies and felonies committed on tlie high seas, and
offences against the law of nations :
To declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rulcc concerning
captures on land and water :
To raise and support armies; but no appropriation of money to that use shall be
for a longer term than two years :
To provide and maintain a navy :
To make rules for the government and regulation of the land and naval
forces :
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. 677
To provide for calling forth the militia to execute the laws of the Union, Rupprea*
insurrections, and repel invasions :
To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the militia, and for governing
»uch part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States, reserving to
the States respectively, the appointment of the officers, and the authority of training
the militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress :
To exercise exclusive legislation, in all cases whatsoever, over such district (not
exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular States, and the acceptance
of Congress, become the seat of government of the United States, and to exercise like
authority over all places purchased by the consent of the legislature of the State in
which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and
other needful buildings : — And
To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution
the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the govern-
ment of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof.
Sec. 9. — The migration or importation of such persons, as any of the States now
existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the Congress prior to
the year one thousand eight hundred and eight ; but a tax, or duty, may be imposed on
such importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each person.
The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in
cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it.
No bill of attainder or ex post facto law shall be passed.
No capitation or other direct tax shall be laid, unless in proportion to the ceBtut^
or enumeration, hereinbefore directed to be taken.
No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any State. No preference
shall be given by any regulation of commerce or revenue to the ports of one State ovet
those of another ; nor shall vessels bound to or from one State be obliged to enter, clear
or pay duties, in another.
No money shall be drawn from the treasury but in consequence of appropriations
made by law ; and a regular statement and account of the receipts and expenditures of
all public money shall be published from time to time.
No title of nobility shall be granted by the United States ; and no person holding
any office of profit or trust under them shall, without the consent of the Congress,
accept of any present, emolument, office, or title of any kind whatever, from any king,
prince, or foreign state.
Sec. 10. — No State shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation ; grant
letters of marque and reprisal ; coin money ; emit bills of credit ; make any thing
but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts ; pass any bill of attainder,
ex post jaxto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts ; or grant any title of
nobility.
No State shall, without the consent of the Congress, lay any imposts or duties on
imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspec-
tion laws; and the net produce of all duties and imposts laid by any State on imports
or exports, shall be for the use of the treasury of the United States; and all such laws
shall be subject to the revision and control of the Congress. No State shall, without
the consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, keep troops or ships of war in time
of peace, enter into any ngreement or compact with another State or with a foreign
power, or engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent danger as wilj
not admit of delay.
678 APPENDIX E.
ARTICIvE n.
Section 1. — The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United
States of America. He shall hold his office during the term of four years, and together
with the Vice-President, cliosen for the same term, be elected as follows : —
Each State sliall appoint, in such manner as the legislature thereof may direct, »
number of electors equal to the whole number of senators and representatives to
which the State may be entitled in the Co. ^ress ; but no senator or representative, or
-person holding an office of trust or profit under the United States, shall be appointed
an elector.
The electors shall meet in their respective States, and vote by ballot for two per-
sons, of whom one, at least, shall not be an inhabitant of the same State with them-
selves. And they shall make a list of all the persons voted for, and of the number of
votes for each ; which list they shall sign and certify, and transmit sealed to the seat
of the government of the United States, directed to the president of the Senate. The
president of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Eepresentatives,
open all the certificates ; and the votes shall then be counted. The person having the
greatest number of votes shall be the President, if such number be a majority of the
whole number of electors appointed; and if there be more than one wlio have such
majority, and have an equal number of votes, then the House of Representatives shall
immediately choose, by ballot, one of them for President ; and if no person have a
majority, then, from the five highest on the list, the said house shall, in like manner,
choose tlie President. But, in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken by
States; the representation from each State having one vote; a quorum for this purpose
shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the States ; and a majority of
all the States shall be necessary to a choice. In every case, after the choice of the
President, the person having the greatest number of votes of the electors shall be Vice-
President. But, if there should remain two or more who have equal votes, the Senate
«liall choose from them, by ballot, the Vice-President.
The Congress may determine the time of choosing the electors, and the day on
which they shall give their votes; which day shall be the same throughout the United
States.
No person except a natural born citizen, or a citizen of the United States at the
time of the adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the office of President;
neither shall any person be eligible to thai office who shall not have attained to the age
of thirty-five years, and been fourteen years a resident within the United States.
In case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death, resignation, or
inability to discharge the powers or duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on
the Vice-President ; and the Congress may, by law, provide for the case of removal,
death, resignation, or inability, both of the President and Vice-President, declaring
what officer shall then act as President ; and such officer shall act accordingly, until
the disability be removed, or a President shall be elected.
The President shall, at stated times, receive for his services a compensation, which
shall neither be increased nor diminished during the period for which he shall have
been elected ; and he shall not receive within that period any other emolument from
the United States or any of them.
Before he enter on the execution of his office, he shall take the following oath or
affirmation : —
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of Pres-
ident of the I^^nited States, and will, to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and
defend the Co.istitution of the United Slates."
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. 679
Sec. 2. — The President shall be commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the
United States, and of the militia of the several States, when called into the actual service
of the United States; he may require the opinion, in writing, of the principal officer in
each of the executive departments, upon any subject relating to the duties of their
respective offices, and he shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offences
against the United States, except in cases of impeachment.
He shall have power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make
treaties, provided two-thirds of the senators present concur; and he shall nominate, and»
by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint, ambassadors, other
public ministers, and consuls, judges of the Supreme Court, and all other officers of the
United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which
shall be established by law : but the Congress may, by law, vest the appointment of
such inferior officers as they think proper, in the President alone, in the courts of law,
or in tlie heads of departments.
The President shall have power to fill up all vacancies that may happen during
the recess of the Senate, by granting commissions, which shall expire at the end of
their next session.
Sec. 3. — He shall, from time to time, give to the Congress information of the state
of the Union, and recommend to their consideration such measures as he shall judge
necessary and expedient; he may, on extraordinary occasions, convene both houses, or
either of them, and, in case of disagreement between them with respect to the time
of adjournment, he may adjourn them to such time as he shall tliink proper; he shall
receive ambassadors and other public ministers; he shall take care that the laws be
faithfully executed ; and shall commission all the officers of the United States.
Sec. 4. — TJie President, Vice-President, and all civil officers of the United States,
shall be removed from office on impeachment for and conviction of treason, bribery,
or other high crimes and misdemeanors.
ARTICLE in.
Section 1. — The judicial power of the United States shall be vested in a Supreme
Court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and
establish. The judges, both of the supreme and inferior courts, shall hold their offices
during good behavior; and shall, at stated times, receive for their services a compen-
sation, whicli shall not be diminished during their continuance in office.
Sec. 2. — The judicial power shall extend to all cases, in law and equity, arising
under this Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made, or which
shall be made, under their authority ; to all cases affecting ambassadors, other public
ministers and consuls; to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction ; to contro-
versies to which the United States shall be a party ; to controversies between two or
more States, between a State and citizens of another State, between citizens of different
States, between citizens of the same State claiming lands under grants of different
States, and between a State, or the citizens thereof, and foreign States, citizens, or
subjects.
In all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and those in
which a State shall be a party, the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction. In
all the other cases before mentioned, the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdic-
tion both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under sucli regulations as the
Congress shall make.
The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury; and
such trial shall be held in the State where the said crimes shall have been committed ;
680 APPENDIX E.
but, when not committed within any State, the trial shall be at such place or places as
the Congress may by law have directed.
Sec. 3. — Treason against the United States shall consist only in levying war against
them, or in adhering to tlieir enemies, giving them aid and comfort. No person shall
be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act,
or on confession in open court.
The Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason, but no
attainder of treason shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture, except during
the life of the person attainted.
ARTICLE IV.
Section 1. — Full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts,
records, and judicial proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by gen-
eral laws prescribe the manner in which such acts, records, and proceedings shall be
proved, and the effect thereof.
Sec. 2. — The citizens of each State shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities
of citizens in the several States.
A person charged in any State with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee
from justice, and be found in another State, shall, on demand of the executive authority
ef the State from which he fled, be delivered up, to be removed to the State having
jurisdiction of the crime.
No person held to service or labor in one State under the laws thereof, escaping
into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged
from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom
.-iicii service or labor may be due.
Sec. 3. — New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union ; but
no new State shall be formed or erected within the jurisdiction of any other State ;
nor any State be formed by the junction of two or more States, or parts of Stales,
without the consent of the legislature of the States concerned, as well as of the
Congress.
The Congress shall have power to dispose of and make .all needful rules and regu-
lations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States ; nnd
nothing in this Constitution shall be so construed as to prejudice any claims of the
United States, or of any particular State.
Sec. 4. — The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a repiib-
lican form of government, and shall protect each of them against invasion ; and on
application of the legislature, or of the executive (when the legislature caa not be
convened), against domestic violence.
ARTICLE V.
The Congress, whenever two-thirds of both houses shall deem it necessary, shall
, impose amendments to this Constitution, or, on the application of the legislatures of
two-thirds of the several States, shall call a convention for proposing amendments,
which, in either case, shall be valid, to all intents and purposes, as part of this Consti-
tution, when ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of the several States, or by con-
ventions in three-fourths thereof, as the one or tiie otiier mode of ratification may be
proposed by the Congress; Provided, that no amendment, which may be made prior to
the year one thousand eight hundred and eight, shall in any manner affect the first and
fourth clauses in the ninth section of the first article; and that no State, without its
consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate.
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. 68]
AKTICLE VI.
All debts contracted, and engagements entered into, before the adoption of this Con-
stitution, shall be as valid against the United States under tliis Constitution, as under
the Confederation.
This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursu-
ance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the
United States, shall be the supreme law of the land ; and the judges in every State shall
be bound thereby, any thing in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary not-
withstanding.
The senators and representatives before mentioned, and the members of the several
State legislatures, and all executive and judicial ofGcers, both of the United States
and of the several States, shall be bound by oatli or affirmation to support this Con-
stitution ; but no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office
or public trust under the United States.
ARTICLE VII.
The ratification of the conventions of nine States shall be sufficient for the estab-
lishment of this Constitution between the States so ratifying the same.
Done in Convention by the unanimous consent of the States present, the seventeenth day of Sep
tember, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty-seven, and of the
Independence of the United States of America the twelfth. In witness whereof we Iiave
hereunto subscribed our names.
George Washington, President,
and Deputy from, Virginia.
New Hampshire. — John Langdon, Nicholas Gilman.
Massachusetts. — Nathaniel Gorham, Rufus King.
Connecticut. — William Samuel Johnson, Roger Sherman.
New York. — Alexander Hamilton.
New Jersey. — William Livingston, David Bearly, William Patterson, Jonathan
Dayton.
Peiotsyxvania. — Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Mifflin, Robert Morris, George Cly-
mer, Thomas Fitzsimons, Jared Ingersoll, James Wilson, Gouverneur Morris.
Delaware. — George Read, Gunning Bedford, Jr., John Dickinson, Richard Bas-
se tt, Jacob Broom.
Maryland. — James McHenry, Daniel of St. Thomas Jenifer, Daniel Carroll.
Virginia. — John Blair, James Madison, Jr.
North Carolina. — William Blount, Richard Dobbs Spaight, Hugh Williamson.
South Carolina. — John Rutledge, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, Charles Pinck-
aey, Pierce Butler.
Georgia. — William Few, Abraham Baldwin.
Attest :
William Jackson, Secretary.
682 APPENDIX E.
AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION.
ARTICLE I.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
tne free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press; or the
right of the peo})le peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of
grievances.
ARTICLE n.
A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of
the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
ARTICLE in.
No soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house without the consent
of the owner ; nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.
ARTICLE IV.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated ; and no warrants
shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or afBrmation, and particularly
describing the place to be searched, and the person or things to be seized.
ARTICLE V.
No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime, unless
on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or
naval forces, or in the militia when in actual service in time of war or public danger;
nor sluill any person be subject, for the same offence, to be twice put in jeopardy of life
or limb; nor shall be compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness against himself;
nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law ; nor shall pri-
vate property be taken for public use without just compensation.
ARTICLE VI.
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and
public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have
been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law; and to
be informeil of tiie nature and cause of the accusation ; to be confronted with the wit-
nesses against him ; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor
and to have the assistance of counsel for his defence.
ARTICLE vn.
In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars,
the right of trial by jury shall be preserved ; and no fact tried by a jury shall be other-
wise re-examined in any court of the United States than according to the rules of the
common law.
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. 683
ARTICIiE Vm.
Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and
unusual punishments indicted.
AKTICLE XX.
The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be construed to
deny or disparage others retained by the people.
ARTICLE X.
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited
by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
ARTICLE XI.
The judicial power of the United States sliall not be construed to extend to any suit
in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by citizens
of another State, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign State.
ARTICLE xn.
The electors shall meet in their respective States, and vote by ballot for President
and Vice-President, one of wliom, at least, shall not be an inhabitant of the same State
■with themselves ; they shall name in their ballots the person voted for as President, and
in distinct ballots the person voted for as Vice-President; and they shall make distinct
lists of all persons voted for as President, and of all persons voted for as Vice-President,
and of the number of votes for each, which lists they shall sign and certify, and transmit
sealed to the seat of the government of the United States, directed to the president of the
Senate ; the president of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of
Bepresentatives, open all the certificates, and the votes shall then be counted ; the per-
son having the greatest number of votes for President shall be the President, if such
number be a majority of the whole number of electors appointed; and if no person ^ave
such majority, then from the persons having the highest numbers, not exceeding three
on the list of those voted for as President, the House of Representatives shall choose
immediately, by ballot, the President. But, in choosing the President, the votes shall
be taken by States, the representation from each State having one vote; a quorum for
this purpose shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the States, and a
majority of all the States shall be necessary to a choice. And if the House of Repre-
sentatives shall not choose a President, whenever the right of choice shall devolve upon
them, before the fourth day of March next following, then the Vice-President shall act
as President, as in the case of the death or other constitutional disability of the Pres-
ident.
The person having the greatest number of votes as Vice-President, shall be the
Vice-President, if such number be a majority of the whole number of electors appointed ;
and if no person have a majority, then from the two highest numbers on the list, the
Senate shall choose the Vice-President; a quorum for the purpose shall consist of two-
thirds of the whole number of senators, and a majority of the whole number shall be
necessary to a choice.
But no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President, shall be eligible
to that of Vice-President of the United States.
684 APPENDIX E.
AETICLE Xm.
Section 1. — Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for
crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United
States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Sec. 2. — Congress shall have power to enforce this Article by appropriate leg-
iiJation.
ARTICLE xrv.
Section 1. — All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to
the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of tlie State wherein they
reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges
or immunities of citizens of the United States ; nor shall any State deprive any person
of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, nor deny to any person within
its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
Sec. 2. — Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States, according
to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State,
excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for choice of
electors for President and Vice-President of the United States, representatives in Con-
gress, the executive and judicial officers of a State, or the members of the legislature
thereof, is denied to any of tlie male inhabitants of such State being twenty-one years
of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation
in rebellion or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in
the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number
of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State.
Sec. 3. — No person shall be a senator, or representative in Congress, or elector of
President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United
States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath as a member of Con-
gress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or 33
an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of tlie United
States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or
comfort to the enemies thereof; but Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each
house, remove such disability.
Sec. 4. — The validity of the public debt of the United States authorized by law,
including debts incurred for payment of pensions, and bounties for services in suppress-
ing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States,
nor any State, shall assume or pay any debt or c>bligation incurred in aid of insurrection
or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any
slave; but all such debts, obligations, and claims shall be held illegal and void.
Sec. 5. — The Congress shall have power to enforce by appropriate legislation the
provisions of this Article.
ARTICLE XV.
Section 1. — The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied
or abridged by the United States, or by any State, on account of race, color, or previous
condition of servitude.
Sec. 2. — The Congress shall have power to enforce this Article by appropriate
legiflation.
APPENDIX F.
WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL ADDRESS.
Friends and Fellow-Citizens : —
The period for a new election of a citizen to administer tlie executive government
of the United States being not far distant, and the time actually arrived when your
thoughts must be employed in designating the person who is to be clothed with that
important trust, it appears to me proper, especially as it may conduce to a more dis-
tinct expression of the public voice, that I should now apprise you of the resolution I
have formed, to decline being considered among the number of those out of whom a
choice is to be made.
I beg you, at the same time, to do me the justice to be assured that this resolution
has not been taken without a strict regard to all the considerations appertaining to the
relation which binds a dutiful citizen to his country; and that, in withdrawing the
tender of service, which silence in my situation might imply, I am influenced by no
diminution of zeal for your future interest; no deficiency of grateful respect for your
past kindness; but am supported by a full conviction tliat the step is compatible
with both.
The acceptance of, and continuance hitherto in, the office to which your suffrages
have twice called me, have been a uniform sacrifice of inclination to the opinion of
duty, and to a deference for what appeared to be your desire. I constantly hoped that
it would have been much earlier in my power, consistently with motives which I was
not at liberty to disregard, to return to that retirement from which I had been reluc-
tantly drawn. The strength of my inclination to do this, previous to the last election,
had even led to the preparation of an address to declare it to you ; but mature reflec-
tion on the then perplexed and critical posture of our afTairs with foreign nations, and
the unanimous advice of persons entitled to my confidence, impelled me to abandon
the idea.
I rejoice that the state of your concerns, external as well as internal, no longer
renders the pursuit of inclination incompatible with the sentiment of duty or propriety;
and am persuaded, whatever partiality may be retained for my services, that, in the
present circumstances of our country, you will not disapprove of my determination to
retire.
The impressions with which I first undertook the arduous trust were explained on
the proper occasion. In the discharge of this trust, I will only say that I have, with
good intentions, contributed towards the organization and administration of the gov-
ernment the best exertions of which a very fallible judgment was capable. Not uncon-
ecious in the outset of the inferiority of any qualifications, experience, in my own eyes—
perhaps still more in the eyes of others— has strengthened the motives to diffidence of
myself; and every uay the increasing weight of years admonishes me, more and more,
that the shade of retirement is as necessary to me as it will be welcome. Satisfied that
if any circumstances have given peculiar value to my services they were temporary, I
685
686 APPENDIX F.
have the consolation to believe that, while choice and prudence invite me to quit the
political scene, patriotism does not forbid it.
In looking forward to the moment which is intended to terminate the career of my
public life, my feelings do not permit me to suspend the deep acknowledgment of that
debt of gratitude which I owe to my beloved country for the many honors it has con-
ferred upon me ; still more for the steadfast confidence with which it has supported me;
and for the opportunities I have thence enjoyed of manifesting my inviolable attach-
ment, by services faithful and persevering, tliough in usefulness unequal to my zeal.
If benefits have resulted to our country from tnese services, let it always be remembered
to your praise, and as an instructive example in our annals, that, under circumstances
in which the passions, agitated in every direction, were liable to mislead ; amidst
appearances sometimes dubious, vicissitudes of fortune often discouraging; in situations
in which, not unfrequently, want of success has countenanced the spirit of criticism —
the constancy of your support was the essential prop of the eflforts, and a guarantee of
the plans, by which they were effected. Profoundly penetrated with this idea, I shall
carry it with me to my grave, as a strong incitement to unceasing wishes, that Heaven
may continue to you the choicest tokens of its beneficence ; that your union and broth-
erly afiection may be perpetual; that the free Constitution, which is the work of your
hands, may be sacredly maintained ; that its administration, in every department, may
be stamped with wisdom and virtue ; that, in fine, the happiness of the people of these
States, under the auspices of liberty, may be made complete, by so careful a preserva-
tion and so prudent a use of this blessing as will acquire to them the glory of recom-
mending it to the applause, the afiection, and adoption of every nation which is yet
a stranger to it.
Here, perhaps, I ought to stop ; but a solicitude for your welfare, which can not
end but with my life, and the apprehension of danger natural to that solicitude, urge
me, on an occasion like the present, to offer to your solemn contemplation, and to
recommend to your frequent review, some sentiments which are the result of much
reflection, of no inconsiderable observation, and which appear to me all-important to
the permanency of your felicity as a people. These will be offered to you with the
more freedom, as you can only see in them the disinterested warnings of a parting
friend, who can possibly have no personal motive to bias his counsels; nor can I forget,
as an encouragement to it, your indulgent reception of my sentiments on a former and
not dissimilar occasion.
Interwoven as is the love of liberty with every ligament of your hearts, no recom-
mendation of mine is necessary to fortify or confirm the attachment.
The Unity of Government, which constitutes you one people, is also now dear to
you. It is justly so; for it is a main pillar in the edifice of your real independence—
the support of your tranquillity at home, your peace abroad, of your safety, of your
prosperity, of that very liberty whicii you so highly prize. But as it is easy to foresee
that, from different causes and from different quarters, much pains will be taken, many
artifices employed, to weaken in your minds the conviction of this truth ; as this is the
l>oint in your political fortress against which the batteries of internal and external ene-
mies will be most constantly and actively (though often covertly and insidiously)
directed— it is of infinite moment that you should properly estimate the imnunse value
of your National Union to your collective and individual happiness; that you should
cherish a cordial, habitual, and immovable attachment to it; accustoming yourselves
to think and speak of it as the palladium oi your political safety and prosperity;
watching for its preservation with jealous anxiety; discountenancing whatever may
suggest even a suspicion that it can, in any event, be aband()nc<l ; and indignantly
frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any portion of our
WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL ADDRESS. 687
country from the rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now link together the
various parts.
For this you have every inducement of sympathy and interest. Citizens by birth
or choice, of a common country, that country has a right to concentrate your affections.
The name of American, which belongs to you in your national capacity, must always
exalt the just pride of patriotism, more than any appellation derived from local dis-
criminations. With slight shades of difference, you have the same religion, manners
habits, and political principles. You have, in a common cause, fought and triumphed
together; the independence and liberty you possess are the work of joint counsels and
joint efforts — of common dangers, sufferings, and successes.
But these considerations, however powerfully they address themselves to your
sensibility, are greatly outweighed by those which apply more immediately to your
interest : here every portion of our country finds the most commanding motives for
carefully guarding and preserving the union of the whole.
The North, in an unrestrained intercourse with the South, protected by the equal
laws of a common government, finds, in the productions of the latter, great additional
resources of maritime and commer«ial enterprise, and precious materials of manu-
facturing industry. The South, in the same intercourse, benefiting by the agency of
the North, sees its agriculture grow, and its commerce expand. Turning partly into its
own channels the seamen of the North, it finds its particular navigation invigorated;
and while it contributes, in different ways, to nourish and increase the general mass of
the national navigation, it looks forward to the protection of a maritime strength to
which itself is unequally adapted. The East, in a like intercourse with the West, already
finds, and in the progressive improvement of interior communications, by land and
water, will more and more find a valuable vent for the commodities which it brings
from abroad, or manufactures at home. The West derives from the East supplies'
requisite to its growth and comfort — and what is perhaps of still greater consequence,
it must of necessity owe the secure enjoyment of indispensable outlets for its own pro-
ductions to the weight, influence, and the future maritime strength of the Atlantic side
of the Union, directed by an indissoluble community of interest as one nation. Any
other tenure by which the West can hold this essential advantage, whether derived
from its own separate strength, or from an apostate and unnatural connection with any
foreign power, must be intrinsically precarious.
While, then, every part of our country thus feels an immediate and particular
interest in Union, all the parts combined can not fail to find in the united mass of
means and efforts, greater strength, greater resource, proportionably greater security
from external danger, a less frequent interruption of their peace by foreign nations;
and what is of inestimable value, they must derive from Union an exemption from
those broils and wars between themselves, which so frequently afilict neighboring
countries, not tied together by the same government; which their own rivalships alone
would be sufficient to produce, but which opposite foreign alliances, attachments, and
intrigues would stimulate and embitter. Hence, likewise, they will avoid the necessity
of those overgrown military establishments, which under any form of government are
inauspicious to liberty, and which are to be regarded as particularly hostile to Repub-
lican Liberty. In this sense it is, that your Union ought to be considered as the main
prop of your liberty, and that the love of the one ought to endear to you the preserva-
tion of the other.
These considerations speak a persuasive language to every reflecting and virtuous
mind, and exhibit the continuance of the Union as a primary object of patriotic desire.
Is there a doubt whether a common government can embrace so large a sphere ? Let
experience solve it. To listen to mere speculation in such a case were criminal. We
43
688 APPENDIX F.
are authorized to hope that a proper organization of the whole, with the auxiliarv
agency of governments for the respective subdivisions, will afford a happy issue
to the experiment. It is well worth a fair and full experiment. With such pow-
erful and obvious motives to Union affecting all parts of our country, while expe-
rience shall not have demonstrated its impracticability, there will always be reason
to distrust the patriotism of those who in any quarter may endeavor to weaken
its bands.
In contemplating the causes which may disturb our Union, it occurs as matter of
serious concern, that any ground should have been furnished for characterizing parties
by geographical discriminations — Nm-thern and Southern, Atlantic and Western; whence
designing men may endeavor to excite a belief that there is a real difference of local inter-
ests and views. One of the expedients of party to acquire influence, within particular
districts, is to misrepresent the opinions and aims of other districts. Yon can not shield
yourselves too much against the jealousies and heart-burnings which spring from thes^
misrepresentations ; they tend to render alien to each other those who ought to be
bound together by fraternal affection. The inhabitants of our Western country have
lately had a useful lesson on this head : they have seen, in the negotiation by the exec-
utive, and in the unanimous ratification by the Senate, of the treaty with Spain, and
in the universal satisfaction at the event throughout the United States, a decisive i)roof
how unfounded were the suspicions propagated among them of a policy in the general
government, and in the Atlantic States, unfriendly to their interests in regard to the
Mississippi : they have been witnesses to the formation of two treaties, that with Great
Britain and that with Spain, which secure to them every thing they could desire,
in respect to our foreign relations, towards confirming their prosperity. Will it not
be their wisdom to rely for the preservation of these advantages on the Union by
which they were procured? Will they not henceforth be deaf to those advisers,
if such there are, wiio would sever them from their brethren, and connect them
with aliens?
To the efficacy and permanency of your Union, a government for the whole is
indispensable. No alliances, however strict, between the parts can be an adequate
substitute; they must inevitably experience the infractions and interruptions which
all alliances in all times have experienced. Sensible of this momentous truth, you
have improved upon your first essay, by the adoption of a Constitution of government
better calculated than your former for an intimate Union, and for the efficacious man-
agement of your common concerns. This government, the offspring of your own
choice, uninfluenced and unawed, adopted upon full investigation and mature delib-
eration, completely free in its principles, in the distribution of its powers, uniting
security with energy, and containing within itself a provision for its own amendment,
has a just claim to your confidence and your support. Eespect for its authority, com-
pliance with its laws, acquiescence in its measures, are duties enjoined by the funda
mental maxims of true liberty. The basis of our political systems is the right of the
people to make, and to alter their constitutions of government. But the constitution
which at any time exists, until changed by an explicit and authentic act of the whole
people, is sacredly obligatory upon all. The very idea of the power and the right of
the people to establish government, presupposes the duty of every individual to obey
the established government.
All obstructions to the execution of the laws, all combinations and associations,
under whatever plausible character, with the real design to direct, control, counteract,
or awe the regular deliberation and action of the constituted authorities, are destructive
of this fundamental principle, and of fatal tendency. They serve to organize faction,
to give it an artificial and extraordinary force — to put in the place of the delegated
WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL ADDRESS. 689^
•will of the nation, the will of a party, often a small but artful and enterprising minor-
ity of the community ; and, according to the alternate triumphs of different parties, to
make the public administration the mirror of the ill-concerted and incongruous
projects of faction, rather than the organ of consistent and wholesome plans digested
by common councils and modified by mutual interests.
However combinations or associations of the above description may now and then
answer popular ends, they are likely, in the course of time and things, to become
potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be ena-
bled to subvert the power of the people, and to usurp for themselves the reins of
government; destroying afterward the very engines which have lifted them to unjust
dominion.
Towards the preservation of your government, and the permanency of your present
happy state, it is requisite, not only that you steadily discountenance irregular
opposition to its acknowledged authority, but also that you resist with care the
spirit of innovation upon its principles, however specious the pretexts. One method
of assault may be to effect in the forms of the Constitution alterations which will
impair the energy of the system, and thus to undermine what can not be directly
overthrown. In all the changes to which you may be invited, remember that time
and habit are at least as necessary to fix the true character of governments, as
of other human institutions ; that experience is the surest standard by which to test
the real tendency of the existing constitution of a country — that facility in changes
upon the credit of mere hypothesis and opinion, exposes to perpetual change from,
the endless variety of hypothesis and opinion ; and remember, especially, that for
the efficient management of your common interests, in a country so extensive as
ours, a govei-nment of as much vigor as is consistent with the perfect security of
liberty, is indispensable. Liberty itself will find in such a government, with powers
properly distributed and adjusted, its surest guardian. It is, indeed, little else
than a name, where the government is too feeble to withstand the enterprises of fac-
tion, to confine each member of the society within the limits prescribed by the laws,
and to maintain all in the secure and tranquil enjoyment of the rights of person and
property.
I have already intimated to you the danger of parties in the state, with particular
reference to the founding of them on geographical discriminations. Let me now take
a more comprehensive view, and warn you in the most solemn manner against the
baneful effects of the spirit of party, generally.
This spirit, unfortunately, is inseparable from our nature, having its root in the
strongest passions of the human mind. It exists under different shapes in all govern-
ments, more or less stifled, controlled, or repressed ; but in those of the popular form, it
is seen in its greatest rankness, and it is truly their worst enemy.
The alternate domination of one faction over another, sharpened by the spirit of
revenge, natural to party dissension, which in different ages and countries has perpe-
trated the most horrid enormities, is itself a frightful despotism. But tliis leads at
length to a more formal and permanent despotism. The disorders and miseries which
result, gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute
power of an individual ; and sooner or later the chief of some prevailing faction, more
able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of
his own elevation, on the ruins of public liberty.
Without looking forward to an extremity of this kind (which, nevertheless, ought
not to be entirely out of sight), the common and continual mischiefs of the spirit of
party are sufficient to make it the interest and the duty of a wise people to discourage
and restrain it.
690 APPENDIX F.
It serves always to distract the public councils, and enfeeble the public adminis-
tration. It agitates the community with ill-founded jealousies and false alarms; kin-
dles the animosity of one part against another, foments occasionally riot and insurrection.
It opens the door to foreign influence and corruption, which find a facilitated access to
the government itself through the channels of party passions. Thus the policy and
the will of one country are subjected to the policy and will of another.
There is an opinion that parties in free countries are useful checks upon the ad-
ministration of government, and serve to keep alive the spirit of liberty. This withiiv
certain limits is probably true; and in governments of a monarchical cast, patriotism
may look with indulgence, if not with favor, upon the spirit of party. But in those of
the popular character, in governments purely elective, it is a spirit not to be encour-
aged. From their natural tendency it is certain there will always be enough of that
spirit for every salutary purpose. And there being constant danger of excess, the efibrt
ought to be, by force of public opinion, to mitigate and assuage it. A fire not to be
quenched, it demands a uniform vigilance to prevent its bursting into a flame, lest, in-
stead of wanning, it should consume.
It is important, likewise, that the habits, of thinking, in a free country, should
inspire caution in those intrusted with its administration, to confine themselves within
their respective constitutional spheres, avoiding in the exercise of the powers of one:
department to encroach upon another. The spirit of encroachment tends to con-
solidate the powers of all the departments in one, and thus to create, whatever the form
of government, a real despotism. A just estimate of that love of power, and prone-
ness to abuse it, which predominates in the human heart, is sufficient to satisfy us
of the truth of this position. The necessity of reciprocal checks in the exercise
of political power, by dividing and distributing it into difierent depositories, and
constituting each the guardian of the public weal against invasions by the others,
has been evinced by experiments ancient and modern ; some of them in our country
and under our own eyes. To preserve them must be as necessary as to institute them.
If, in the opinion of the people, the distribution or modification of the constitutional
powers be in any particular wrong, let it be corrected by an amendment in the way
which the Constitution designates. But let there be no change by usurpation ; for
though this, in one instance, may be the instrument of good, it is the customary
weapon by which free governments are destroyed. The precedent must always greatly
overbalance in permanent evil any partial or transient benefit which the use can at any
time yield.
Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and
morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of
patriotism, who should labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness, these
firmest props of the duties of men and citizens. The mere politician, equally with the
pious man, ought to respect and to cherish them. A volume could not trace all their
connections with private and public felicity. Let it simply be asked, where is the
security for property, for reputation, for life, if the sense of religious obligation desert
the oaths which are the instruments of investigation in courts of justice? And let us
with caution indulge the supposition, that morality can be maintained without religion.
Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar
structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can
prevail in exclusion of religious principle.
It is substantially true, that virtue or morality is a necessary spring of popular
government. The rule indeed extends with more or less force to every species of free
government. Who that is a sincere friend to it, can look with indifierence upon attempt*
to shake the foundation of the fabric?
WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL ADDRESS. 691
Promote then, as an object of primary importance, institutions for the general dif-
fusion of knowledge. In proportion as the structure of a government gives force to
public opinion, it is essential that public opinion should be enlightened.
As a very important source of strength and security, cherish public credit. One
method of preserving it is to use it as sparingly as possible, avoiding occasions of ex-
pense by cultivating peace; but remembering also that timely disbursements to prepare
for danger, frequently prevent much greater disbursements to repel it; avoiding like-
wise the accumulation of debt, not only by shunning occasions of expense, but by vig-
orous exertions in time of peace to discharge the debts which unavoidable wars may
have occasioned, not ungenerously throwing upon posterity the burden which we our-
selves ought to bear. The execution of these maxims belongs to your Representatives,
but it is necessary that public opinion should co-operate. To facilitate to them the
performance of their duty, it is essential that you should practically bear in mind, that
toward the payment of debts there must be revenue; that to have revenue there must be
taxes ; that no taxes can be devised which are not more or less inconvenient and
unpleasant; that the intrinsic embarrassment inseparable from the selection of the proper
objects (which is always a choice of difficulties) ought to be a decisive motive for a
candid construction of the conduct of the government in making it, and for a spirit of
acquiescence in the measures for obtaining revenue which the public exigencies may at
any time dictate.
Observe good faith and justice towards all nations, cultivate peace and harmony witK
all ; religion and morality enjoin this conduct, and can it be that good policy does not
equally enjoin it? It will be worthy of a free, enlightened, and, at no distant period, a
great nation, to give to mankind the magnanimous and too novel example of a people
always guided by an exalted justice and benevolence. Who can doubt but that in the
course of time and things, the fruits of such a plan would richly repay any temporary
advantage which might be lost by a steady adherence to it? Can it be that Providence
has not connected the permanent felicity of a nation with its virtue? The experiment,,
at least, is recommended by every sentiment which ennobles human nature. Alas ! is it
rendered impossible by its vices?
In the execution of such a plan, nothing is more essential than that permanent^
inveterate antipathies against particular nations, and passionate attachments for others,
should be excluded ; and that in place of them just and amicable feelings towards all
should be cultivated. The nation which indulges toward another an habitual hatred or
an habitual fondness, is in some degree a slave. It is a slave to its animosity or its affec-
tion, either of which is sufficient to lead it astray from its duty and its interests. Antip-
athy in one nation against another, disposes each more readily to offer insult and injury,
to lay hold of slight causes of umbrage, and to be haughty and intractable, when
accidental or trifling occasions of dispute occur. Hence frequent collisions, obstinate^
envenomed, and bloody contests. The nation, prompted by ill-will and resentment,
sometimes impels to war the government, contrary to the best calculations of policy.
The government sometimes participates in the national propensity, and adopts through
passion what reason would reject ; at other times, it makes the animosity of the nation
subservient to projects of hostility instigated by pride, ambition, and other sinister and
pernicious motives. The peace often, sometimes perhaps the liberty, of nations has
been the victim.
So, likewise, a passionate attachment of one nation for another produces a variety
of evils. Sympathy for the favorite nation, facilitating the illusion of an imaginary
common interest in cases where no real common interest exists, and infusing into one
the enmities of the other, betrays the former into a participation in the quarrels
<md wars of the latter, without adequate inducement or justification. It leads also
692 APPENDIX F.
%o concessions to the favorite nation of privileges denied to others, which is apt
•doubJy to injure the nation making the concessions, by unnecessarily parting wiili
what ought to have been retained ; and by exciting jealousy, ill-will, and a dispo-
sition to retaliate, in the parties from whom equal privileges are withheld. And
it gives to ambitious, corrujjted, or deluded citizens (who devote themselves to
the favorite nation) facility to betray or sacrifice the interests of their own country,
ivithout odium, sometimes even with popularity; gilding with the appearance of a
virtuous sense of obligation a commendable deference for public opinion, or a laudable
zeal for public good, the base or foolish compliances of ambition, corruption, or
infatuation.
As avenues to foreign influence in innumerable ways, such attachments are
particularly alarming to the truly enlightened and independent patriot. How many
opportunities do they afibrd to tamper with domestic factions ; to practice the arts of
sedition, to mislead public opinion, to influence or awe the public councils! Such an
attachment of a small and weak, towards a great and powerful nation, dooms the former
to be the satellite of the latter. Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence (I
conjure you to believe me, fellow-citizens,) the jealousy of a free people ought to be
constantly awake; since history and experience prove that foreign influence is one of
the most baneful foes of Republican Government. But that jealousy be useful must
be impartial; else it becomes the instrument of the very influence to be avoided, instead
of a defence against it. Excessive partiality for one foreign nation, and excessive
dislike of another, cause those whom they actuate to see danger only on one side, and
serve to veil and even second the arts of influence on the other. Real patriots, who
may resist the intrigues of the favorite, are liable to become suspected and odious;
while its tools and dupes usurp the applause and confidence of the people, to surrender
their interest.
The great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is, in extending our
■commercial relations, to have witli them as little 'political connection as possible. So
far as we have already formed engagements, let them be fulfilled with perfect good faith.
Here let us stop.
Europe lias a set of primary interests, which to us have none, or a very remote
relation. Hence she must be engaged in frequent controversies, the causes of wliicii are
essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to impli-
cate ourselves, by artificial ties, in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics, or the ordi-
nary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities.
Our detached and distant situation invites and enables us to pursue a different
■course. If we remain one people, under an efficient government, the period is
not far off when we may defy material injury from external annoyance; wlien we
take such an attitude as will cause the neutrality we may at any time resolve
upon to be scrupulously respected; when belligerent nations, under the impossi-
bility of making acquisitions upon us, will not lightly hazard the giving us provo-
cation ; when we may choose peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice, shall
counsel.
Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation ? Why quit your own to
stand upon foreign ground? Why, by interweaving our destiny with that of any part
of Europe, entangle our peace and prosperity in the toils of European ambition, rival-
ship, interest, humor, or caprice?
It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of
the foreign world — so far, I mean, as we are now at liberty to do it ; for let me not
be understood as capable of patronizing infidelity to existing engagements. I hold
the maxim no less applicable to public than to private affairs, that honesty is always
WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL ADDBESS. 69-3
the best j^olicy. I repeat it, therefore, let those engagements be observed in their
genuine sense. But, in my opinion, it is unnecessary, and would be unwise to extend
them.
Taking care always to keep ourselves, by suitable establishments, on a respectable
defensive posture, we may safely trust to temporary alliances for extraordinary emer-
gencies.
Harmony, and liberal intercourse with all nations, are recommended by policv^
humanity, and interest.
But even our commercial policy should hold an equal and impartial hand ; neither
seeking nor granting exclusive favors or preferences; — consulting the natural course
of things; diffusing and diversifying by gentle means the streams of commerce, but
forcing nothing ; establishing, with powers so disposed, in order to give trade a stable
course, to define the rights of our merchants, and to enable the government to support
them, conventional rules of intercourse, the best that present circumstances and mutual
opinion will permit, but temporary, and liable to be from time to time abandoned
or varied, as experience and circumstances shall dictate ; constantly keeping in view,
that it is folly in one nation to look for disinterested favors from another; that it
must pay with a portion of its independence for whatever it may accept under that char-
acter; that by such acceptance, it may place itself in the condition of having given
equivalents for nominal favors, and yet of being reproached with ingratitude for not
giving more. There can be no greater error than to expect, or calculate upon, real
favors from nation to nation. It is an illusion which experience must cure, which a just
pi'ide ought to discard.
In offering to you, my countrymen, these counsels of an old and affectionate friend.
I dare not hope they will make the strong and lasting impression I could wish^ — that
they will control the usual current of the passions, or prevent our' nation from running tlie
course which has hitherto marked the destiny of nations. But if I may even flatter my-
self tliat they may be productive of some partial benefit, some occasional good; that they
may now and then recur to moderate the fury of party spirit, to warn against the mis-
chiefs of foreign intrigue, to guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism ; this-
hope will b£ a full recompense for the solicitude for your welfare by which they have
been dictated.
How far in the discharge of my official duties I have been guided by the principles^
which have been delineated, the public records and other evidences of my conduct must
witness to you and to the world. To myself, the assurance of my own conscience is, that
I have at least believed myself to be guided by them.
In relation to the still subsisting war in Europe, my proclamation of the 22d
of April, 1793, is the index to my plan. Sanctioned by your approving voice, and
b}' that of your Kepresentatives in both Houses of Congress, the spirit of tliat measure-
has continually governed me, uninfluenced by any attempts to deter or divert me
from it.
After deliberate examination, with the aid of the best lights I could obtain, I was
well satisfied that our country, under all the circumstances of the case, had a right to
take, and was bound in duty and interest to take, a neutral position. Having taken it,.
I determined, as far as should depend upon me, to maintain it with moderation, perse-
verance, and firmness.
The considerations which respect the right to hold this conduct, it is not necessarj
on this occasion to detail. I will only observe, that, according to my understanding of
the matter, that right, so far from being denied by any of the belligerent Powers, hasf
been virtually admitted by all.
The duty of holding a neutral conduct may be inferred, without any thing more*
694 APPENDIX F.
from the obligation which justice and humanity imposes on every nation, in cases in
■which it is free to act, to maintain inviolate the relations of peace and amity towaids
other nations.
The inducements of interest for observing that conduct will best be referred
lo your own reflections and experience. With me, a predominant motive has been
to endeavor to gain time to our country to settle and mature its yet recent insti-
tutions, and to progress, without interruption, to that degree of strength and con-
sistency which is necessary to give it, humanly speaking, the command of its own
fortunes.
Though, in reviewing the incidents of my administration, I am unconscious of
intentional error, I am nevertheless too sensible of my defects, not to think it prob-
able that I may have committed many errors. Whatever they may be, I fervently
beseech the Almighty to avert or mitigate the evils to which they may tend. I shall
also carry with me the hope that my country will never cease to view them with indul-
gence; and that after forty-five years of my life dedicated to its service, with an upright
zeal, the faults of incompetent abilities will be consigned to oblivion, as myself must
soon be to the mansions of rest.
Kelying on its kindness in this as in other things, and actuated by that fervent
love towards it, which is so natural to a man who views in it the native soil of him-
self and his progenitors for several generations ; I anticipate with pleasing expec-
tation that retreat, in which I promise myself to realize, Avithout alloy, the sweet
enjoyment of partaking, in the midst of my fellow-citizens, the benign influence of
good laws under a free government — the ever favorite object of my heart, and the
hapjiy reward, as I trust, of our mutual cares, labors, and dangers.
G. Washington.
United States, 17th September, 1796.
APPENDIX G.
THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION.
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
[If the Emancipation Proclamation is to be regarded as the cause of the freedom
of the African race in the United States, then indeed must it be considered as among
the most important documents known in history : perhaps the most important of all.
The truer view of the case, however, seems to be this : The inexorable Logic of Events
was rapidly bringing about the emancipation of the slaves. The National government
fell under a stringent necessity to strike a blow at the labor system of the Southern
States. With every struggle of the war the sentiment of abolition at the North rose
higher and higher. The President himself and the chief supporters of his administra-
tion had for years made no concealment of their desire that all men everywhere
should be free. The occasion was at hand. Mr. Lincoln seized and generalized the
facts, embodied them in his own words, and became for all time the oracle and inter-
preter of National Necessity.— TuE Author.]
Whereas, on the twenty -second day of September, in the year of our Lord one
thousand eight hundred and sixty-two, a Proclamation was issued by the President of
the United States, containing among other things the following, to wit :
" That on the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
hundred and sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State, or designated part
of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall
be then, thenceforward and forever free, and the executive government of the United
States, including the military and naval authority thereof, will recognize and main-
tain the freedom of such persons, and will do no act or acts to repress such persons, or
any of them, in any efforts they may make for their actual freedom."
" That the executive will, on the first day of January aforesaid, by proclamation,
designate the States and parts of States, if any, in which the people thereof respectively
shall then be in rebellion against the United States, and the fact that any State, or the
people thereof, shall on that day be in good faith represented in the Congress of the
United States by members chosen thereto at elections wherein a majority of the quali-
fied voters of such State shall have participated, shall, in the absence of strong coun-
tervailing testimony, be c semed conclusive evidence that such State and the people
thereof are not then in rebellion against the United States.
Now, therefore, I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, by virtue
of the power in me vested as Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy of the
United States in time of actual armed rebellion against the authority and government
«f the United States, and as a fit and necessary war measure for suppressing said
695
696 APPENDIX G.
rebellion, do, on this first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand
eight hundred and sixty-three, and in accordance with my purpose so to do, publicly
proclaim for the full period of one hundred days from the day the first above-
mentioned, order and designate, as the States and parts of States wherein the people
thereof respectively are this day in rebellien against the United States, the following^
to wit : '
Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, (except the parishes of St. Bernard, Plaquemines,
Jefferson, St. John, St. Charles, St. James, Ascension, Assumption, Terre Bonne,
Lafourche, St. Mary, St. Martin, and Orleans, including the city of New Orleans), Mis-
sissippi, Alabama, Flokida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and
Virginia (except the forty-eight counties designated as West Virginia, and also the-
counties of Berkley, Acconiac, Northampton, Elizabeth City, York, Princess Ann, and
Norfolk, including the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth), and which excepted parts
are, for the present, left precisely as if this Proclamation were not issued.
And by virtue of the power and for the purpose aforesaid, I do order and declare
that all persons held as slaves within said designated States and parts of States are, and
henceforward shall be free ; and that the executive government of the United States,
including the military and naval authorities thereof, will recognize and maintain the
freedom of said persons.
And I hereby enjoin upon the people so declared to be free, to abstain from all
violence, unless in necessary self-defence, and I recommend to them that in all cases,
when allowed, they labor faithfully for reasonable wages.
And I further declare and make known that such persons of suitable condition
will be received into the armed service of the United States to garrison forts, positions,,
stations, and other places, and to man vessels of all sorts in said service.
And upon this act, sincerely believed to be an act of justice, warranted by the
Constitution, upon military necessity, I invoke the considerate judgment of mankind
and the gracious favor of Almighty God.
Ih testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my name, and caused the seal of the
United States to be affixed.
Done at the City of Washington, this first day of January, in the year of owr
[ L. s. ] Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, and of the Independence
of the United States the eighty-seventh.
Abraham Lincoln.
Dy the President:
William H. Seward,
Secretary of State.
PEONUI^OIATIOlSr OF PROPEE ISTAMES.
IE., English; F., French; S., Spanish; P., Portugese; It., Italian; G., German; N., Norse; Sw...
Swedish; Pol., Polish; L., Latin; I., Indian.]
Abenaki [I.], ab-e-nah-ki.
Abercrombie [E.], &b-er-krum-bi.
Adet [F.], ah-da.
Adolphiis [L.], a-dol-fus.
Aix-la-Chapelle [F.], aks-lah-shah-pel.
Algonquin [I.], al-gSn-kfen.
Almonte [S.], al-mon-te.
Alvarado [S.], al-va-rali-dO.
Ambrister [E.], 3,m-bris-ter.
Amerigo Vespucci [It.], ah-mer-e-g5 ves-
poot-che.
Amidas [E.], &m-id-as.
Ampudia [tS.]. am-poo-di-a.
Andre [F.], an-dra.
Antietam [E.], an-te-t3,ni.
Antonio de Espego [S.], ahn-to-ni-0 da es-
pa-ho.
Arbuthnot [E.], ahr-buth-not.
Arista [S.], ah-ris-ta.
Armada [S.], ahr-mah-da.
Ashe [E.], ash.
All Glaize [F.], 0-glaz.
Ayavalia [S.], i-ah-vahl-ya.
Ayotla [S.], 1-ot-la.
Aztecs [I.], az-teks.
Bahia [S.], bah-e-a.
Balfour [E.], bal-foor.
Barron [E.], bahr-ron.
Baiim [E.], bawui.
Baumarchais [F.], b5-mahr-sha.
Bayard [E.], bi-ahrd.
Beaujeu [F.], b5-zhu.
Beauregard [F.], bo-ra-gahrd.
Beau-Sejour [F.], bS-sa-zhoor,
Bellomont [E.], bcl-O-mont.
Bernard [E.], ber-nahrd.
Bienville [F.], be-ong-vel.
Blennerhassett [E.], blen-ner-hSs-set.
Blyth [E.], blith.
Boscawen [E.], bos-liaw-en.
Buddhist [Sanscrit], boocl-dist.
Bulkeley [E.], bulk-li.
Biirgoyne [E.], biir-goin.
Cabot [E.], kab-6t.
Cadwallader [E.], kad-wahl-la-der.
Canonchet [I.], ka-non-shet.
Canonicus [l.], ka-noii-i-kus.
Canseau [F.], kan-s6.
Carleton [E.] Iiahrl-tiin.
Cartier [F.], kahr-ti-a.
Casimer [Sw.], kas-i-mgr.
Castin [F.], kas-tan.
Chabot [F.], sha-bo.
Cham [Tartar], Jiam.
Champe [E.], kamp.
Champlain [F.], sham-plan.
Chapultepec [S.], kah-pool-ta-pek.
Chaudiere [F.], sho-de-ar.
Chauncey [E.], cbawn-.se.
Cherbourg [F.], sher-boorg.
Cherokee [I.], cher-5-ke.
Chickamauga [E.], chik-a-mawga.
Chickasaws [I.], chik-a-sawz.
Chicora [S.], che-ko-ra.
Chignecto [I.], she-nek-tO.
Chihuahau [vS.], she-wali-wah.
Choctaws [I.], chok-tawz.
Christison [Sw.], kris-ti-siin,
Christophe [S.], kris-to-fe.
Chrysler [E.], kris-ler.
Churubusco [S.], koo-roo-boos-kO.
Clarendon [E.], kiar-en-diin.
Cochrane [E.], kok-ran.
Coligni [F.l ko-len-ye.
Columbus [L.], kO-lum-bus. ^
Comanches [I.], k5-maii-chez.
Conde [F.], kon-da.
Contreras [S.], kon-tra-ras.
Copernicus [L.], ko-per-ni-kiis.
Copley [E.], kop-le.
Corees [I.], ko-rez.
Cornwallis [E.], kawrn-wahl-lis.
Credit Mobilier [F.], cra-di-mO-bil-i-ar^
Croghan [E.], krog-han.
Dacres [E.], dak-erz.
Dahlgren [E.], dai-gren.
Darrah [E.], dahr-rah.
D'Anville [F.], dong-vel.
D' Aubrey [F.], dO-bra.
Daye [E.], da.
De Barras [F.], du bahr-rah.
Decatur [E.], de-ka-tur.
De Fleury [F.], dii flur-i.
De Grasse [F.], du gi-as.
De Kalb [F.], du kahlb.
Delaplace [F.], du-la-pias.
De Monts [F.], du mong'.
D'Estaing [F.], da-stang.
De Tcrnay [F.], dii ter-na.
De Vaca [S.], da vali-ka.
De Vergor [F.], du-var-gor.
De Villiers [F.], dii-vel-yar.
De Vries [F.], du vrez.
Dieskau [F.], de-es-ko.
Dominic de Gourges [F.], do-man-ek d&.
goor^.
Dongan [E.], diln-gan.
Doniphan [E.], don-i-fan.
Dupont [E.], du-pdnt.
Du Quesne [F.], de-kan.
Dyar [E.], dl-ar.
Eldorado [S.], el-d0-rah-d5.
69Y
*698
PRONUNCIATION' OF PROPER NAMES.
Elkswatawa [I.], elks-wah-tah-wah.
JEmucfau [I.], e-mooK-faw.
Endicott [E.], en-di-kot.
Ericsson [E.], er-iks-sun.
Erskine [E.], er-skin.
Esopns [E.], e-so-pus.
Esquimaux [I.], es-kl-niSz.
Farragut [E.] fahr-ra-gu.
Ferdinand de Soto [S.], fer-di-nahnd da
so-to.
Ferdinand Gorges [EJ, fer-di-nandgor-jez.
Ferdinand Magellen [P.], fer-di-nand nia-
jel-lan.
Ferguson [E.], fur-gu-sun.
Fernandez de Cordova [S.], fer-nahn-deth
da kor-do-va.
Fernando Cortez [S.], fer-naliii-do kor-teth.
Fouchet [F.], foo-sha.
Eraser [E.], fra-zer.
Freneau [E.], fre-no.
Frobisher [E.], frob-ish-er.
Frontenac [F.], fron-te-nak.
■Gabarus [E.], ga-biir-us.
•Galileo [It.], gah-li-la-o.
Garabier [F.], gahm-bi-a.
Ganowanian [I.], gahn-o-wahn-i.an.
'Gaspar Corlereal [P.], gahs-palir kor-ta-ra-
alil.
Gaspe [F.], gas-pa.
Gawen [E.j, g^aw-en.
Genet [F.], zhe-na.
Gillis [G.], gil-lis.
Gladwyn [E.], gUld-win.
Gloucester [E.], glos-ter.
■Godyn [E.], go-din.
Goffe [E.], jfawf.
<5orgeana [E.], gor-je-tln-a.
Gosnold [E.], gos-iiold.
Goulburn [E.], jsool-biirn,
Grierson [E.], grer-sfui.
Grijalva [S.], gre-hahl-va.
Guerriere [F.], ger-ri-ar.
Gustavus [L.], gus-ta-vus.
Hakluyt [E.], hilk-Ioot,
Havre de Grace [F.], hahver-du-grfts.
Hayne [E.], han.
Heister [G.], his-ter.
Herjulfson [N.], har-yoolf-sOn.
Herkimer [E.], hur-ki-mer.
Hertel [F.], her-tel.
Hochelaga [L], hOk-e-lah-gS..
Hosset [G.], hos-set.
Houston [E.], hows-tun.
Hovenden [E.], ho-ven-d«n.
Hugenots [F.], hu-ge-nots.
Iroquois [I.], ir-O-kwali.
Isabella [S.], iz-a-b6l-la.
Isle-aiix-Noix [F.], eI-0-nooab.
luka [E.], i-yoo-ka.
Jameson [E.], jilm-e-sun.
Joris [G.], yo-ria.
Juan Ponce de Leon [S.], hwatan pon-tlia
da la-on.
Juarez [S.], liwaw-rgth.
Jumonville [F.], zlie-mong-vel.
Kamtchatkans [I.], kam-tchftt-kanz.
Kearney [E.], kalir-ne.
Kearsarge [E.], kahr-sabr-ge, or Uipr-siilirj.
Kieft [E.], keft.
Klamaths [I.], klftm-aths.
Knowlton [E.], nol-tiin.
Knypbausen [G.], nep-how-sen.
Kosciusko [Pol.], k5s-sI-«s-ko.
Kossuth [G.], kOs-shoot.
Koszta [Hungarian], kot-ta.
La Colle [F.], la-kol.
La Fayette [F.], la-fa-et.
La Fitte [F.], la-fit.
La Koche [F.], la-rosh.
La Koque [F.], la-rok.
La Salle [F.], la-sSl.
Lathrop [E.], lu-thrup.
Laudonniere [F.], lo-don-ni-ar.
Laurie [E.], law-ri.
La Vega [S.], lah vii-ga.
Le Bceuf [F.J, lu-buf.
Leddra [E.], led-ra.
Ledyard [E.], led-yabrd.
Leisler [G.], lis-ler.
Leitch [E.], lech.
Leverett [E.], lev-er-et.
Leyden [G.], li-den.
Lief Erickson [N.], lef er-ik-siin.
Lionel [E.], li-o-nel.
Lopez [S.], lo-peth.
Loudoun [E.], loo-doon.
Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon [S.], low-kaha
vahs-ketli da il-yon.
Liitzen [G.], letz-en.
Luzerne [Swiss], loo-zern.
Macdonough [E.], mak-don-O.
Macdougall [E.], mak-doo-gal.
Macomb [E.], ma-kom.
Magaw [E.], ma-gaw.
Mandeville [E.], mftn-de-vil.
Manteo [I.], mahn-te-S.
Manuel [P.], mahn-oo-al.
Markham [E.], niahrli-am.
Marlborouj^h [E], uiahrl-brii.
Massasoit [L], mas-sas-O-it.
Mather [E.], mftthe-er.
Matoaka [I.], mat-O-ftk-a.
Matthews [E.], mfith-uz.
Maurepas [F.], mO-re-pah.
Maximilian [G.], max-i-itiil-ySln.
McCuUough [E.], niak-fcul-lo.
Mcintosh [E.], miik-in-tosh.
Meacliam [E.], me-cham.
Meigs [E.], niegz.
Meta Incognita [L.], me-ti in-cog-ni-tS,
Miantonomoh [I.], mi-an-tO-no-mO.
Micanopy [I.], ml-kfiii-0-pi.
Minuit [G.], min-oo-it.
Mohegan [I.], mO-he-g3,n.
Monckton [E.], muuk-tun.
Monk [E.], munk.
PRONUNCIATION OF PROPER NAMES.
699
3Iontcalm [F.], mont-Uahm.
Monteano [S.], mOn-ta-ahii-O.
Montezuma [I.], m6n-te-zoo-m3,.
Montmorenci [F.], mont-mO-ren-si.
Mosley [E.], mos-le.
Moultrie [E.], mol-tri.
Nairne [E.], iiarn.
Nassau [F.], nas-so.
Naumkeag [I.], nawm-ke-Sg.
Nipmucks [I.], nip-muks.
Nueces [S.], nwa-ses.
Ocklawaha [I.], 6k-la-wah-hah.
Odeneal [E.], o-den-el.
Oglethorpe [E.], o-gel-thorp.
O'Hara [E.], 5-Iialir-ra.
Ojeda [S.], 0-ha-da.
Okeechobee [I.], 0-ke-cho-bg.
Oldham [E.], old-am.
Olustee [E.], 0-lus-te.
Opecancanough [I.], O-pe-kSn-kan-o.
Orapax [I.], 6r-a-pakx.
Osceola [I.J, 6s-se-o-la.
Oswald [E.], 6s-wawld.
Ouatanon [I.], waht-a-non.
•Oxenstiern [Sw.], 6ks-en-stgrn.
Pamphilo de Narvaez [S.], pahm-fe-lO da
nahr-vah-eth.
Pascua Florida [L.], pahs-koo-a flor i-da.
Pauw [G.], paw.
Pedro Menendez [S.], pa-drO ma-len-deth.
Pemaquid [I.], pem-a-kwid.
Pepperell [E.], pep-per-el.
Pequod [I.], pe-kw6d.
Perote [S.], pa-ro-te.
Pigot [E.], pig-6t.
Pinta [S.], pen-ta.
Titcairn [E.], pit-karn.
Pizarro [S.], pe-thahr-rO.
.Pocahontas [I.], p6k-a-h6n-tas.
Poictiers [F.], pwah-tg-S.
Point au Tiembles [F.], pwan t5 trabmbl.
Pontchartrain [F.], pOn-shahr-tran.
Poutrincourt [F.], poo-tran-k.oor.
Powhatan [I.], pow-hat-an.
Presque Isle [F.]. presk el.
Prevost [E.], prev-ost.
Prideaux [F.], pre-do.
Pulaski [Pol.], poo-lahs-kl.
Quantrell [E.], Iiwahn-trel.
Queretaro [S.], ka-ra-tal»-rO.
Eahl [G.], ralil.
Eeleigh [E.J, raw-li.
Batcliffe [E.J, rat-klif.
Rawdon [E.], raw-dun.
Raymbault [F.J, ram-l>o.
Eevere [E.], re-v6r.
Biall [E.J, ri-al.
Ribault [F.J, re-bo.
Roberval [F.], rOb-er-vahl.
Rochambeau [F.J, rO-sham-bo.
Rochelle [F.J, r0-sh61.
Roderigo Triana [S.], rOd-re-gO trg-ali-nS,
iloseci-ans [G.], ros-e-krahns.
Ryswick [G.], res-wik.
Saltillo [S.J, sahl-tel-yC5.
Samosset [I.], sAm-O-set.
Santa Maria [S.], sahn-ta mah-re-i.
Sassacus [I.], sfts-sak-us.
Sayle [E.J, sal.
Schuyler [E.], skl-ler.
Selish [I.J, se-liish.
Seminoles [I.], sem-i-nC5lz.
Sheaffe [G.], shSf-fe.
Shoshonees [I.], shO-sho-n6z.
Sicklem'ore [E.J, sik-el-mor.
Sloughter [E.J, slo-ter.
Squanto [I.], skwatan-to.
St. Croix [F.J, sant-liroi.
Steuben [G.J, stu-ben.
Stirling [E.J, stur-ling.
St. Leger [F.J, san la-zha.
Stoughton [E.J, sto-tiin.
St. Pierre [F.J, san pe-ar.
Stuyvesant [G.J, sti-ves-ant.
Subercase [F.J, se-ber-Uahs.
Talladega [I.J, tahl-la-de-ga.
Tamaulipas [S.J, tahm-aw-le-p3,s.
Tanacharisson [L.J, tan-a-kdr-is-siin.
Tecumtha [I.J, te-kum-tha.
Theresa [G.J, ter-es-a.
Thorfinn Karlsefne [N.], tor-fin kahil-
•sef-ne.
Thorstein Erickson [N.J, tor-stin er-ik-sun.
Tituba [I.J, ti-too-ba.
Tohopeka [I.J, tO-hO-pe-ka.
Tomo-Chichi [I.J, to-mO-che-chi.
Van Rensselaer [E.], van rens-se-lahr.
Van Twiller [G.J, van twel-ler.
Vasco de Gama [P.], vahs-ko da gali-mi.
Vasco Nunez de Balboa [S.], vahs-ko no»n-
yeth da bahl-bo-a.
Vaudreuil [F.J, v5-dru-el.
Vaughan [E.J, vawii.
Vergennes [F.J, ver-zhen.
Verhulst [G.], varhoolst.
Verrazzani [It.], ver-rat-tsaU-nc.
Wainman [E.J, wan-man.
Walloons [G.], wahl-loonas.
Wampanoags [I.], wahm-pan-o-agz,
Warwick [E.J, wahr-rick.
Waymouth [E.J, wa-muth.
Welde [E.J, wel-de.
Weitzef [G.], wlt-zel.
Whalley [E.J^ hwahl-li.
Whinyates [E.], hwiii-yats.
Whitefield [E.J, hwit-feld.
Wingina [I.J, win-ge-na.
Worcester [E.], woos-ter.
Wouter [G.J, woo-ter.
Xeres [S.J, ha-reth.
Yamacraws [I.], yahm-S,-kraus5.
Yeamans [E.J, ye-manz.
Yeardley [E.J, ynrd-li.
Youghiogheny [I.], yoh-ho-ga-ni.
Yusef [Moorish], yoo-sef.
Zenger [G.], zen-ger.
INDEX
aBENAKIS, The,
War with, US, \^4.
ABERCRUMBIE, General,
Expeditiou of" against Ticonderoga, 271.
ACADIA,
Name of, 75 ; ruin of, 261-264.
AD.\MS, John, . ^
Predicts American Independence, 2S6 ; nominates
Washington for general-in-chief, 301 ; member of
committee to draft Declaration, 309; commis-
sioner to Paris, 354 ; Vice-President, 362 ; sketch
of, 372; administration of, 372-376; death of, 424.
ADAMS, John Qi'iNcv, , , , „ -^ * .o-,.
Secretary of State, 417; elected President, 423,
sketcli of, 423; administration of, 423-426; death
of, 401.
ADAMS, Samuel,
Speaks out fur liberty, 295.
ADET, M.,
Evil influence of in United States, 373.
ADOLPHUS, Gi'RTAVUs,
Plans au American colony, 164.
AIX-LA-CHAPELLE,
Treaty of, 15S.
ALABAMA,
Admission of, 420.
ALABAMA. The,
Career of, 533.
ALABAMA CLAIMS, The,
Settlement of, 556.
ALASKA,
Purchase of, 547.
ALGIERS.
Tribute paid to, 370 ; brought to terms, 416.
ALGONQUINS, The,
Territorial position of, 42 and Map 1.
ALLEN, Ethan',
Expedition of against Ticonderoga, 298.
AMENDMENTS TO CONSTITUTION,
Notice of, 301 ; passage of Fourteenth and Fif-
teenth, 553.
AMHERST, GENEnAL,
Commander-in-chief in America, 273.
AMIDAS, Philip,
Voyage of, 81.
AMNESTY PR0CL.OIATI0N,The,
Account of, 544.
ANDERSON, Roisert,
At Fort Sumter, 4S4,
ANDRE, John,
Connection of with Arnold's treason, 344 ; execu-
tion of, 345.
ANPROS, Sir Edmund,
Career of in America, 123, 146, 147, 174, 191, 197, 200,
207.
ANTIETAM,
Battle of, 50l>.
ANTI-FEDERALIST PARTY, The,
Rise of, 3.V).
ARCHDALE, John,
Governor of South Carolina, 234.
ARCTIC EXPLORATIONS,
.\ccouut of, 407.
ARGALL, Samuel,
Expeditions of, 108, 109.
ARKANSAS,
Organization of, 420 ; admisBion of, 435.
ARMADA, The Invincible,
Mentioned. 83.
TOO
ARNOLD, Benedict,
At Ticonderoga, 299 ; at Queb<>c, 303 ; heroism of ac
Saratoga, 323 ; treason of, 343 ; in Virginia, 346.
ARTHUR, Chister A.,
Vice- President, 643; becomes President, 652.
ATLANTA,
Capture of, 526.
B
BACON, Nathaniel,
Rebellion of, 120.
BALBOA,
Discovery of the Pacific by, 57.
BALTIMORE,
Siege of, 410 ; attack on Union soldiers in. 485.
BALTIMORE, The Lords,
Colonize Maryland, 217.
BANK OF THE UNITED STATES,
Organization of, 360 ; expiration of charter of,
415; rechartering of vetoed by Jackson, 427 ; new
charter of vetoed by Tyler, 441.
BANKS, N.P.. . , , ., t, .
In West Virginia, 502; m command of the Rea
River expedition, 524.
BARCLAY, Robert,
Governor of New Jersey, 207.
BARLOW, Arthur,
Voyage of, 81.
BAXTER, George,
Bearer of charter of Rhode Island, 197.
BELLOMONT, Earl of.
Governor of New York, 179.
BENNINGTON,
Battle of, 322.
BENTON, Thomas H.,
Procures the expunging of resolutions of o^nsurc
against Jackson, 432.
BERKELEY, Sir William,
Governor of Virginia, 110 ; vengeance of, 121 ; pro-
prietor of New Jersey, 2U3.
BLACK FRIDAY,
Story of, 553.
BLACK HAWK WAR, The,
Account of, 429.
BLOCKADE,
Tlie question of in Europe, 384, 385.
BOBADILLA,
Mentioned, 56.
BONAPARTE, Napoleon.
Policy of toward tlio United States, 374 ; sellt
Jjouisiana, 37S ; measures of against Great Brit-
ain, 3S3; issues Milan Decree, 386; invasion ol
Russia by, 393.
BONAPARTE, Louis Napoleon,
Intrigue of respecting Mexico, 545.
BOONE, Daniel,
I Colonizes Kentucky, 367.
BOOTH, John Wilkes,
Assassination of Lincoln by, 542.
BOSTON,
Founded, 127; occupied by the British army, 293v
massacre at, 293 ; siege of, 298-3U7 ; evacuation of,
307 ; great fire in, 558.
BRADDOCK, Edward,
Campaign of, 258-201 ; death of, 201.
BRADFORD, William.
Governor of Massachusetts, 124.
BRAGG, Braxton,
At Murfreesborough, 500; at Chickamauea, 514^
at Lookout and Missionary Ridge, 514, 515.
INDEX.
101
BBANDYWINE,
Battle of, 324.
BRECKINRIDGE, John C,
Vice-President, 474 ; in commaud in the Shenan-
doali Valley, 536.
BROWN, John,
Insurrection led by, 478.
BBYANT. William Cullen,
Death of, 639.
BUCHANAN, James.
Part of in Ostend Manifesto, 472; elected Presi-
dent, 474 ; sketch of, 474 ; administration of, 474-
482.
BUENA VISTA,
Battle of, 453.
BULL RUN,
Battle of, 491 ; second battle of, 505.
r.UNKER HILL,
Fortification of by Americans, 299; battle of, 300.
BUNKER HILL MONUMENT, The,
History of, 443.
BURGESSES, House op.
Establishment of, 110 ; scene in, 289.
BURGOYNE, General,
Invasion of, 321 ; at Bemis's Heights, 323; capit-
ulation of, 324.
BURNSIDE, Amduose E.,
In command of the Army of the Potomac, .Wg ; at
Fredericksburg, 509.
BURR, Aaron,
Elected Vice-President, 376; kills Hamilton, 382;
conspiracy of, 383.
BUTLER, B.F.,
At New Orleans, 49S ; at Fort Fisher, 532 ; at Ber-
muda Hundred, 53().
c
•CABINET, The,
Organization of, 364.
CABLE, The Atlantic,
Laying of, 476, 545.
•CABOT, John,
Voyage of, 76.
■CABOT, Sebastian,
Voyage and explorations of, 77.
■CALHOUN, John C.
In Congress, 391 ; secretary of war, 417; Vice-
President, 423 ; as a nullifier, 429 ; death of, 467.
CALIFORNIA,
Discovery of gold in, 459; organization of, 463;
admission of, 464.
•CALIFORNIANS, The,
Territorial position of, 44 and Map I.
•CALVERT, Sir George,
Sketch of, 2! 7.
CALVERT, Sir Cecil,
Colonizes Maryland, 218.
CAMDEN,
Battle of, 341.
CANADIAN INSURRECTION, The,
Account of, 438.
CANONCHET,
Notice of, 141 ; execution of, 143.
•CANONICUS,
Notice of, 129.
CAPE BRETON,
Conquest of, 157, 158.
CARTERET, Sir George,
Proprietor of New Jersey, 203.
CARTIER, James,
Voyage of, 71.
CARVER, John,
Leader of the Pilgrims, 91 ; death of, 123.
■CENSUS,
Of 1790 and 1800, 375; of 1810,390; of 1840, 439; of
1870,5.^5; of 1«?0,646.
CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE
Account of, 563-631.
-CERRO GORDO,
Battle of, 455.
CHAMPE, Sergeant John,
Attempt of to capture Arnold, 346.
CHAMPION HILLS,
Battle of, 512.
CHAMPLAIN, Samuel,
Career of in America, 75, 76.
CHANCELLORSVILLE,
Battle of, 518.
CHAPULTEPEC,
Battle of, 456.
CHARLES I.,
Relations of with American colonies, see Jicissci
chusetls and Virginia.
CHARLES II.,
Relations of with American colonies, sei'. Ului^r.H-
ckuselts and Virginia.
CHARLESTON,
Founding of, 231 ; taken by the British, 340; evac-
uation of, 351; siege of, 518; capture of by ^lle|•-
man, 529.
CHARTER OF NEW ENGLAND,
Account of, 126.
CHARTER OAK, The,
Story of, 147, 191.
CHASE, Salmon P.,
Secretary of the treasury, 484 ; presides at the
impeachment trial of Johnson, 551 ; death of, 562.
CHEROKEES, The,
Territorial position of, 43 and Map I. ; war withi
276 ; difficulties with, 430.
CHESAPEAKE, Bay of.
Exploration of by John Smith, 103.
CHESAPEAKE, The,
Affair of, 385.
CHICAGO,
Burning of, 557.
CHICKAMAUGA,
Battle of, 514.
CHICORA,
Old name of Carolina, 62.
CHINESE EMBASSY,
Establishment of at Washington, 639.
CHIPPEWA,
Battle of, 407.
CHURUBUSCO,
Battle of, 456.
CIVIL RIGHTS BILL, The
Passage of, .548.
CIVIL WAR, The,
Causes of, 486-489 ; history of, 490-540.
CITIZENSHIP,
English views of, 384.
CLARKE, John,
Colonizes Rhode Island, 194 ; services of, 196.
CLARKE, William,
Exploring expedition of, 382.
CLAYBORNE, William,
Career of in Maryland, 216-222.
CLAY, Henry,
In Congress, 391 ; influence of in Missouri Com-
promise, 421; secures the passage of Omnibus
Bill, 465 ; death of, 468.
CLINTON, George,
Vice-President, 382.
CLINTON, Sir Henry,
Attempt of to save Burgoyne, 323 ; commander-
in-chief of British army, 330.
CODDINGTON, William,
Sets up Israel in Rhode Island, 195.
COLFAX, Schuyler,
Vice-President, 551.
COLIGNI,
Mentioned, 73.
COLLEGES,
I Number and character of before Revolution, 282.
COLONIES, The American,
Reflections on character of, 245; number and ex-
tent (if, 2^;0; population ol, 280; tendency towanls
unity, 280; education in, 2S2 ; printing and bo.'U-i
in, 282 ; post-offices a ml roads in, 283; industrii-s cf,
284; reflections on, 2S4 ; dispute of with Englaiid,
285-296 ; independence of, 309, 355.
COLONIZATION SOCIETY, The,
Organization of, 416.
702
INDEX.
COLORADO,
Admissiou of, 561.
COLUMHIA, District of,
Orguuization ol, 375.
COLUMBUS, Christopher, . , „.^;„
Sketch of, 55 ; discovery of America by, 55 , mis-
fortunes of, 6B.
C0MANCHES,The,
Territorial position of, 44 and Map 1.
CONCORD,
Founding of, 130 ; battle of, 29S.
CONFEDERATION, The,
History of, 356-358 ; Articles of, Appendix h.
CONGRESS, The First Colonial,
Meeting of, 291.
CONGRESS OF THE REVOLUTrON,
Assembling of, 296.
CONNECTICUT, ^ , _„
Colonization of, 130; history of, lM-192.
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES,
Analysis of, :«0 ; adoption of by the States, 351
text of. Appendix F.
CONSTITUTION, The,
Affair of, 397.
COOPER, Sir Ashley,
Proprietor of Carolina, 225.
CORDOVA,
Explorations of, 68.
CORINTH,
Battle of, 499.
CORN BURY, Lord,
Governor of New York, 179.
CORNWALLIS, Lord,
Pursues Washington across New Jersey, 314 ; con-
siders the war ended, 315; returns to the work,
317; at Princeton, 31S; at Brandywine. 325 ; in
Carolina, 347; in Virginia, 352; surrender of at
Yorktown,353.
CORTEREAL, Caspar,
Voyages ot, 69.
CORTEZ, Fernando,
Conquest of Mexico by, 58-61.
COTTON GIN, The,
Asa factor of the Civil War, 487.
CRANFIELD, Edward, .
Governor of New Hampshire, 145 ; career of lu
the province, 2(K).
CREDIT MOBILIER, The.
Uproar concerning, 560.
CREEKS, The,
War with, 403; difficulties with, 424.
CROMWELL, Oliver,
Relations of with Virginia, 115-118; favors New
England, 135.
BROWN POINT
Expedition ot Johnson against, 265.
CUBA,
Difficulties concerning, 466.
I>
DAKOTAS, The,
Territorial position of, 43 and Map I.
DALE, Sir Thomas,
Governor of Virginia, 107.
DARE, Virginia.
Birth mentioned, 83.
DARRAH, Ltdia,
Story of, 327.
DAVIS, Jefferson,
President of the Confederacy, 481 ; sketch of, 492;
flight of from Richmond, 538; capture and trial
of, 540.
DAYE, Stephen,
First printer in America, 132.
DEARBORN, Henry,
Commander-in-chief of American army, 393.
De AYLLON,
Discovery of Carolina by, 62.
DECATUR, Commodore,
In the Mediterranean, 415.
DeGAMA, . ,.,. , ,„
Circumnavigation of Africa by, 78,
De GOURGES,
Settles with the Spaniards, 74.
De KALB, Baron,
Fights for liberty, 320; killed, 342.
DELAWARE, . , , t> ,
Colonization of, 165; secession of from Pennsyl-
vania, 213.
De LEON, Ponce,
Discovery of Florida by, 67.
DEMAGOGUES,
Influence of, 489.
DEMOCRATIC PARTY, The,
Comes into power, 376 ; notice of, 42S.
De JIONTS,
In America, 75.
De SOTO, Ferdinand, , _, „. .
Explorations of, 64-67; discovery of th« Missis-
sippi by, 65.
DETROIT,
Capture of by the British, 395.
DONIPHAN, Colonel,
Campaign of, 453.
DORR INSURRECTION, The
Account of, 442.
DOUGLAS, Stephen A.,
Favors popular sovereignty, 472.
DRAFT, The,
Ordered by Congress, 522.
DRAKE, Sir Francis,
Career of, 80 ; carries off Raleigh s colony, 82.
DRED SCOTT DECISION, The,
History of, 474.
E
EAST INDIA COMPANY, The Dutch,
Mentioned, 92.
EATON, William,
Campaign of in Africa, 381.
EDUCATION,
Favored by the Puritans, 159 ; character and ex-
tent of in the colonies, 282 ; necessary to perpetu-
ity of American institutions, 642.
ELIZABETH, Queen,
Death of, 84.
EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION, The,
Issued by Lincoln, 511 ; text of. Appendix H.
EMBARGO ACT, The,
Passage of, 385 ; ridicule of, 386.
ERICKSON, Lief,
Discovery of America by, 51.
ERICKSON, Thorwald a>d Thorstein,
Mentioned, 51, 52.
ERICSSON, John,
Invention of Monitor by, 497.
ESPEGO,
Founder of Santa F6, 68.
ESQUIMAUX, The,
Territorial position of, 42 am. Mapl.
EUTAW SPRINGS,
Battle of, 351.
F
FAIR OAKS,
Battle of, 503.
F.^RRAGUT, Admiral,
On the Mississippi, 498; capture of Mobile by, 531.-
FEDERALIST PARTY, The,
Rise of, 359 ; overthrow of, 375.
FENDALL, Josiar,
Governor of Maryland, 223.
FIELD. Cyrus W' .,
Laying of Atlantic cable by, 476, 545.
FILLMORE, Millard,
Vice-President, 462; became President. 465; wise
measures recommended by, 466.
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
7oa
FINANCIAL CRISES,
Of 1819, 419; ofisar, 437; of 1873, 560.
FIVE FORKS,
Battle of, 538.
FLETCHER, Benjamin,
Governor of New York, 178.
FLORIDA,
Colonization of, 68 ; cession of, 419.
FORREST, N. B.,
Raid of through Tennessee and Kentucky, 523.
FORT DONELSON,
Capture of, 496.
FORT Dn QUESNE,
See Fort Pitt.
FORT FISHER,
Capture of, 532.
FORT JACKSON,
Capture of, 498.
FORT LeBCEUF,
Affairs at, 253.
FORT McHENRY,
Defence of, 411.
FORT MEIGS,
Siege of, 401.
FORT MIKFLIN,
Defence of, 326.
FORT MOULTRIE,
Attack on, 307.
FORT ORANGE (Nassau),
Building of, 94, 162.
FORT NASSAU,
Built, 203.
FORT NECESSITY,
Built and defended by Washingtom, 255, 256.
FORT PITT,
Built, 254 ; captured by French, 254; retaken, 272.
FORTS
A list of at the beginning of the War of 1812, 396.
FORT ST. PHILIP,
Capture of, 498.
FORT SUMTER,
Bombardment of, 484.
FORT WILLIAM HENRY,
Siege of, 269.
FRANCE,
Possessions of in America, 270; incites the colonies,
2S5; alliance with, 328-330; difficulties with, 373.
FRANKLIN, Benjamin,
Plans Union for America, 257 : editor of New Eng-
land Cour«n^282; favors libertr, 289 ; at the court
of Louis XVI, 329; sketch of, 329.
FREDERICKSBURG,
Battle of, 509.
FREMONT, John C,
Explorations of, 452.
FRENCH, The,
Explorations of in America, 70-Tfi ; 248,249; trad-
ine-posts of, 249 ; claim the Ohio Valley, 251.
FROBISHER, Martin,
Voyages of, 79.
FROLIC, The,
Affair of, 397.
FULTON. RoTtERT,
Invention of steamboat by,386 ; the torpedo busi-
ness, 387.
G
SADSDEN PURCHASE, The,
Account of, 470.
GAGE, General,
Occupies Boston, 293; career of, 297-301.
GxVRFIKLD, James A.,
ElectPfl President, 643; sketch of, 647 ; administra-
tion of, 647-649; assassination and death of, 650, 651.
GATES, Horatio,
In coniiiiand of the Army of the North, 323; in th*
cab;il against AVashington,328.
GATES, Sin Thomas,
Governor of Virginia, 106.
GENET, Citizen,
Career of in the United States, 368.
GEORGE III.,
Character of, 286.
GEORGIA,
Colonization of, 238 ; history of, 238-246.
GERRY, Eleridge,
Embassy of to France, 373 ; Vice-President, 3M.-
GETTYSBURG,
Battle of, 520.
GHENT,
Treaty of, 414.
GILBERT, SiK HuMPHEET,
Career of, 80.
GIST, Chkistopher,
Expedition of to the Ohio, 251.
GOLD,
Discovery of in California, 459.
GORGES, Ferdinand,
Proprietor of New Hampshire, 198.
GOSNOLD, Bartholomew,
New route of to America, 84.
GRANT, Ulysses S.,
At Donelson, 496 ; at Pittsburg Landing, 497 ; at
Vicksburg, 512 ; commander-in-chief, 525 ; in the
Wilderness, 535; besieges Petersburg, 536; in
pursuit of Lee, 53S-540; President, 651 ; sketch of,
652; iidministration of, 552-632; tour of, 645.
GREAT BRITAIN,
Colonizes America, 76-91, 95-245 ; grants of terri-
tory by, see Map III; extent of possessions
(1655), see Map IV ; oppresses the colonies, 285-
296; treaty with, 354; troubles with, 369; doc-
trine of respecting neutrals, 384.
GREELEY, Horace,
Notice of, 558.
GREENE, Nathaniel,
Saves th» army at Brandy wine, 325; splendid
campaigns of in the Carolinas, 347-351.
GRENVILLE, Sir Richard,
In command of Raleigh's fleet, 82.
GRIJALVA,
Explorations of, 58.
GUEKRIERE, The,
Affair of, 397.
GUILFORD COURT HOUSE,
Battle of, 349.
HALF-KING, The,
Relations of with the French and English, 255.
HALF-MOON, The,
Voyages of, 92-94.
HALIFAX FISHERY AWARD,
History of, 638,639. '
HAMILTON, Alexander,
Builder of Fort Washington, 314 ; defender of the
Constitution, 360; sec'y of the treasury, 364 ; first
major-gen. of the army, 373; killed by Burr, 382.
HARMAR, General,
Expedition of, 366.
HARPER'S FERRY,
Destruction of arsenal at, 485.
HARRISON, William IIehuy,
Governor of ludiuim, 390; at Tippecanoe, 391 ; m
command in tlie Wc-st, 4(ii); President, 439; sketch
of, 440; administration of, 440; death of, 441.
HARTFORD CONVENTION, Account of,412.
HARVARD COLLEGE, Founding of, 132.
HAYES, RUTHEHFORD T'..,
Elected President, 63:;; sketch of, 633 ; adminiHi ■
tion of, 633-646.
HAYNE. Senator,
Debate of with Webster, 429.
HAYTI,
Claims recognition, 417.
HENRY, John,
Conspiracy of against the United States, 392.
HENRY, Patrick,
Makes some remarks in the House of Burgesses,
289 ; leads the people, 303 ; opposes the Constitu-
tion, 362.
704
INDEX,
HERJTILFSON,
Mentioned, 51.
HESSIANS, Thk,
Hired to figiit America, 308; overpowered at
Trenton, 316.
HOBKIRK'S HILL,
Battle of, 350.
HOOD, J. B.,
Driven from Atlanta, 526 ; defeated at Nashville,
527.
HOOKER, Joseph,
At Lookout Mountain, 515; in command of the
Army of the Potomac, 516; at Chancellorsville,
518.
HOKNET, The,
Affair of, 405.
HOUSTON, Sam,
Sketch of, 477.
BOWE, General,
In command at Boston, 305; negotiates -with
Washington, 310; sends .- fleet up the Hudson,
318.
HUDSON, Sir Henry,
Efforts of to reach the Indies, 92 ; explorations in
America, 92 ; death of, 94 ; character of, 100.
HUGUENOTS, The,
Mentioned, fi7 ; in Florida, 67 ; destruction of, 63 ;
persecution of in France, 232.
HULL, William,
Disastrous campaign of, 394.
HUMBOLDT,
Cited, 54.
HURON-IROQUOIS, The.
Territorial position of, 43 and Map I.
HUTCHINSON, Annf,
Heresy of, 131 ; an oxilo to Rhode Island, 132 ;
death of, 106.
ICELANDERS. The,
Discovery of America by, 51.
ILLINOIS,
Organization and admission of, 420.
IMPORTATION ACT, The,
Passage of, 287.
IMPRESSMENT,
Right of claimed by Great Britain, 393.
INDEPENDENCE,
Declaration of, 309 nni? Appendix D; achievement
of, 35o ; centennial of, 563-631.
INDIANA,
Organization of, 378; admission of, 410.
INDIANS, The,
Name of, 41 ; origin of, 41 ; ethnology of, 42; fam-
ilies of, 42; characttM-istics of, 44,45; family or-
ganization of, 45; civil government among, 40;
religion of, 40 ; arts of, 47 ; language of, 47 ; writ-
ing of, 48; personal appearance of, 49; manners
and customs of, 49.
INDIAN TERRITORY, The,
Organization of, 430.
INTERIOR, Department of.
Establishment of, 402.
INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS,
Question of, 418.
INTERNAL REVENUE, The,
Account of, 541.
IROQUOIS, The,
Territorial position of, 43 and Utap I ; treaty with,
175.
IRVING. Washington,
Relation of to American Literature, 477.
iSAP.ELLA,
I'avor of to Columbus, 55.
JACKSON, Anhrew,
In command against the Creeks, 403; at New
Orleans, 412; against the Seminoles, 419; elected
President, 426; sketch of, 426; adminietration of,
426-436 ; censured by Congress, 432 ; farewell Ad-
dress of, 435 ; death of, 461.
JACKSON, Stonewall,
At Cedar Mountain, 505; at FrederickBbnrg;509;
at Chancellorsville, 518 ; death of, 518.
JAMES II.,
Relations of with American colonies, see Mas$ar
chuseCls and Virginia.
JAMESTOWN,
Founding of, 87 ; affairs at, 95-113
JAPAN,
Opening of intercourse with, 470.
JAVA, The.
Affair of, 397.
JAY COOKE AND COMPANY,
Failure of, 500.
JAY, John,
Defends the Constitution, 359; appointed chief-
justice, 364 ; negotiates a treaty with Great Brit-
ain, 309.
JEFFERSON, Thomas,
Author of the Declaration, 309; drafts ordinance
for the North-western Territory, 359 ; opposes the
Constitution, 362 ; secretary of state, 364 ; Vice-
President, 371 ; elected President, 376; sketch of,
376 ; administration of, 376-3SS ; death of, 424.
JESUITS, The,
Discoveries and explorations of in America, 248,
249.
JOHNSON, Andrew,
Elected Vice-President, 541; becomes President,
544; sketch of, 544 ; administration of, 544-551;
impeachment of, 550.
JOHNSTON, Joseph E.,
At Manassas, 491 ; wounded, 503 ; generalship of,
530 ; surrender of, 530.
K
KANSAS,
Troubles in, 473.
KANSAS-NEBRASKA BILL, The,
Account of, 473.
KEARNEY, Philip,
Expedition of to California, 452; killed at Chaa-
tilly,506.
KEARSARGE, The,
Destruction of the Alabama by, 534.
KENESAW MOUNTAIN,
Battle of, 525.
KENTUCKY,
Colonization of, 367 ; admission of, 367.
KIDD, William,
Career of, 179.
KIEFT, Sir William.
Governor of New Netherland, 165.
KILPATRICK, II. J.,
Fight of with Hampton, 529.
KLAMATHS,
Territorial position of, 44 and Mapl.
KOSSUTH, Louis,
Visit of to the United States, 407.
KOSZTA, Martin,
Affair of, 471.
La FAYETTE, Marouis de.
Gives himself to the cause of liberty, 320: catD'
paign of in Virginia, 352; visit of to America, 422.
LANE, Ralph,
Governor of Raleigh, 82.
La ROCHE, SIarqvis of.
Plans a colony, 74.
La SALLE, Robekt de,
Explorations of, 248.
LAUDONNIERE,
In Florida, 74.
LAWRENCE, (\\ptain.
Death of, 400.
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATF.f^.
705
liEE, Charles, , ,. , ,. <• *.
Conduct of as a general, SIT)-, disobedience ot at
Moumouth, 331 ; dismissal of from service, 331.
LEE, Richard Henry, „,,„„„
Kesolutions of Independence offered by, o09.
XEE, Robert E., . ,.„-.,„
In W. Virginia, 490; coniniander-in-chief ot tue
Confederates, 503 ; invades Maryland, 506 ; at An-
tietam,506; at Fredericksburg, 609; at Chancellors-
ville 518; invades Pennsylvania, 519; at Gettys-
burg 520 ; in the Wilderness, 535 ; retreat "t from
Richmond, 538 ; surrender of, 5-10 ; death of, 562.
LTCISLER, Jacob, . -o- , ,■,-.
Leader of insurrection m New York, 176.
LEOPARD, The,
Affair of, 385.
XEWIS, Captain,
Exploring expedition of, 382.
LEWISTOWN,
Founding of, 163.
LEXINGTON,
Battle of, 298.
LIFE-SAVING SERVICE,
Establishment of, 640.
LINCOLN, Abraham, . , . .
Elected President, 479; sketch of, 482; adminis-
tration of, 482-543; issues Emancipation Procla-
mation, 511 ; re-elected, 541 ; assassination ot, 542 ;
character of, 542, 543.
LITTLE BELT, The,
Affair of, 391.
LIVINGSTON, Edward,
Agent to purchase Louisiana, 378.
LOCKE, John,
Prepares the Grand Model, 225.
LONDON COMPANY,
Organization of, 85; grant to, 85 and Maplll;
charter of, 86 ; fleet sent to America by, 86.
LONG ISLAND,
Battle of, 311.
LONGSTREET, General,
See Lee's campaiijus
LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN,
Storming of, 515.
LOUDOUN, Lord,
Career of in America, 267-270.
LOUISBURG,
Siege of, 157,158.
LOUISIANA, , ,. ^. „„
Purchase of, 378; boundary of, 378; discord in, 559.
LUNDY'S LANE,
Battle of, 408.
LYON, Nathaniel,
In Missouri, 492.
M
MacDONOUGH, Commodore,
At Plattsburg, 409.
MADISON, James, , „ .^
Favors the Constitution, 362; elected President,
388; sketch of, 388; administration of, 3SS-416;
unwarlike disposition of, 392 ; death of, 435.
JMAGELLAN, Ferdinand,
Circumnavigation of globe by, 61.
31AINE,
Colonization of, 136; admission of, 420.
MALA^ERN HILL,
Battle of, 504.
MANASSAS,
Battle of, 491.
MAN015VILLE, Sir John,
On the figure of the eiiTtl\,5i, and Appendix A.
MANHATTAN ISLAND,
Purchase of, 162.
JIARION, Francis,
Career of, 341,342, 350.
MARSHALL, John,
Embassy of to France, 373 ; in the chief-gustice-
Bhip, 379.
MARYLAND,
Colonization of, 210 ; history of, 215-224.
45
MASON, J. M.,
Embassador of the Confederacy, 494; capture of,
494; liberation of, 495.
MASONIAN DIFFICULTIES, The,
Concerning New Hampshire, 198-202.
MATHER, Cotton,
Responsible for witchcraft atrocities, 1di-1jj.
MAY, Cornelius, , , , , ,„
Governor of Nevir Netherland, 162.
McCLELLAN, George B.,
Campaign of in West Virginia, 400; in com-
mand of the Army ot the Potomac, 494; peuin.
Bular campaign of, 502-505 ; ;at Antietam, 506 ;
superseded, 509; candidate for the presidency,
541.
MEADE, George G., . . r ., .
At Fredericksburg, 509 ; in command of the Ar-
my of the Potomac, 520; at Gettysburg, 520; m
the Wilderness, 535; death of, 552.
MEIGS, Colonel,
Exploit of at Sag Harbor, 319.
MELENDEZ, Pedro,
Career of in Florida, 67.
MERRIMAC, The,
Fight of with the Monitor, 498.
MIANTONOMOH,
Relations of with Roger Williams, 194.
MICHIGAN, , . .
Organization of, 382 ; admission of, 43a.
MILL SPRING,
Battle of, 496.
MINNESOTA,
Admission of, 477.
MINUIT, Peter
Governor of New Netherland, 162.
MISSIONARY RIDGE,
Storming of, 516.
MISSISSIPPI,
Organization and admission of, 41S.
MISSOURI,
Organization of, 420 ; admission of, 421.
MISSOURI COMPROMISE, The,
History of, 421.
MOBILIANS, The,
Territorial position of, 43 and Map I.
MODOCS, The,
War with, 559.
MONITOR, The,
Fight of with the Merrimac, 498.
MONMOUTH,
Battle of, 331.
MONROE, James, .
Agent to purchase Lotiisiana, 378; elected Presi-
dent, 416; sketch of, 416 ; administration of, 416-
423 ; death of, 435.
MONROE DOCTRINE, The,
Proclamation of, 422.
MONTEREY,
Storming of, 451.
MONTEZUMA,
Account of, 58-61.
MONTGOMERY, Richard,
Expedition of against Canada, 303 ; death of, 304 ;
sketch of, 305.
MONTREAL,
Name of, 72 ; expedition against, 156.
MORTON, Oliver P.,
Sketch of, 640.
MORGAN, Daniel,
At Bemis's Heights, 323 ; at the Cowpens, 347.
MORGAN, John,
Raid of into Indiana and Ohio, 517.
MORGAN, William,
Disappearance ol, 425.
MORMONS, The,
Account of, 444 ; rebellion of, 475.
MORRIS, Robert,
Devotes his fortune to liberty, 316; appointed
secretary of finance, 346; brought to ruin, 35i
MORRIS, T. A..
Campaign of in West Virginia, 490.
MORSE, S. F. B.,
Invention of telegraph by, 446.
706
INDEX.
MORTON, Omver P.,
Death of, 644.
MOSCOSO.
Successor of De Soto, 66.
MURFREESBOROUGH,
Battle of, oOO.
K
NARVAEZ, Pamphilo DE,
Aniiy Bent by to Mexico, 60; goTernor of Florida,
KASHVILLE,
Siege of, 526.
NATIONAL DEBT, The,
Extent of, 545.
NEGRO PLOT, The,
In New York, 1S2.
NEW AMSTERDAM,
Founding of, 94 ; history of, 160-171.
NEW ENGLAND, ^ ^. .
Colonization of, 91, 123,184,193, 198 ; education in,
282.
NEW HAMPSHIRE,
Colonization of, 193 ; history of, 198-202.
NEW HAVEN,
Founding of, 188.
NEW JERSEY, ^ „„, „„^ ^. . .
Colonization of, 203; history of, 203-208; division
of, 205.
NEW NETUERLAND,
Name of, 94 ; history of, 160-171 ; conquest of, 171.
NEW ORLEANS,
Battled', 413.
NEWPORT, Christopher,
Sent out by Louduu Company, 86.
NEW SWEDIN. . . , „ T-T
History of, 165-169; extent of, JSInp IV.
NEW YORK.
Colonization of, 160 ; history of, 160-183.
NEW YORK CITY,
Sottlenient of, 160; under the Dutch, 160-171 ; un-
di-i- the Euslish, 17I-IS3; British forces before,
310; captured by British, 313 ; evacuation of, 355.
NEZ PERCE INDIANS, The,
War with, G3fi.
NICOLLS, Richard,
Governor of New York, 172
HORSEMEN. The,
Discovery of Anieric.i by, .11 ; character of, 52;
traces of in Rhode Island, 195.
NORTH CAROLINA,
Colonization of, 224 ; history of, 224-229.
NORTH-EASTERN BOUNDARY,
Settlement of, 441.
NORTHEN PACIFIC RAILROAD, The,
Account of, 5t>0.
NORTH-WESTERN TERRITORY,
Organization of, 359 ; division of, 377.
NULLIFICATION,
Account of, 428; a causeof the Civil War, 488.
o
OHIO,
Organization and admission of, 378.
OHIO COMPANY. The,
Grant to, 250.
OGLETHORPE, James,
Sketch of, 238 ; career of in Georgia, 239-244.
OMNIBUS BII,L, The,
History of, 464.
OPECHANCANOUGH,
Notices of, 1(«), 113.
ORDERS IN COUNCIL. The,
Issued, .'W) ; promised repeal of, ."Wg.
OREGON BOUNDARY QUESTION, The,
Settlement of, 458.
OSTEND MANIFESTO, The,
History of, 472.
PACIFIC RAILROAD, The,
Project of, 469 ; completion of, 9iS3.
PALO ALTO,
Battle of, 450.
PAPER MONEY,
First used in America, 149.
PARRIS, Samuel,
Responsible for witchcraft atrocities, 150-153.
PATROONS, The Dutch,
Colonize New Netherland, 163, 164.
PAUL JONES,
Great naval battle of, 338.
PEACOCK, The,
Affair of, 405.
PENN, William,
In New Jersey, 205; proprietor of Pennsylvania,
209 ; sketch of, 210 ; career of, 210-215.
PENNSYLVANIA,
Colonization of, 209 ; history of, 209-215.
PEPPEREL, Sir William,
Expedition of against Louisburg, 157.
PEQUODS, The,
War with, 1S5-1S8.
PERRY, Oliver H.,
Victory of on Lake Erie, 401.
PETERSBURG,
Siege of, 536, 538.
PHILADELPHIA,
Founding of, 212 ; capture of by the British, 325,
PHILIP, King op the Nakuag.vssetts,
War with, 139-144.
PHIPPS, Sir William,
Connection of with Salem witchcraft, 151.
PICKETT, General,
Charge of at Gettysburg, 522.
PIERCE, Franklin,
Elected President, 469; sketch of, 469; adminis-
tration of, 469-474.
PILGRIMS, The, ,
See Puritans.
PINCKNEY, C. C,
Embassy of to Prance, 373.
PITT, William,
Premier of England, 270; defends America, 292.
PITTSBURG LANDING,
Battle of, 497.
PLYMOUTH,
Founding of, 91.
PLYMOUTH COMPANY, The,
Organization of, 85 ; grant to, 85 and JUap III.
PLYMOUTH COUNCIL, The.
Organization of, 88 ; grant to, 88 and Map III.
POCAHONTAS,
Story of, 101-109.
POLK, James K.,
Elected President, 446; sketch of, 447; adminis-
tration of, 447-462.
POLK, Leonidas,
Campaign of in Kentucky, 493.
PONTIAC,
Conspiracy of, 277-279.
POPE, John,
Campaign of in Virginia, 505.
PORT BILL, The Boston,
Passage of, 295.
PORTER, Admiral,
Bombards Vicksburg, 512 ; at Fort Fisher, 532.
PORT ROYAL, (Annapolis'),
Founded, 75 ; siege of, 155.
PORTUGESE. The,
Discoveries of in America, 69.
POSTAL MONEY- ORDER SYSTEM, The,
Establishment of, 516.
POWHATAN
Relations of with the colony at Jamestown, 96-112.
PREBLE, Commodore,
In the Mediterranean, 3S0.
PBESCOTT, General,
Capture of, 320.
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
707
PBESIliENT, The,
Affau of, 391.
PRINOETON,
Battle of, 318.
PRING Martin,
Voyage of, 84.
PRINTING-PRESS, The,
Set up in Cambridge, 132; workof in the colonies,
2S2.
PULASKI, Count,
Houored for service at Brandywine, 325.
PURITANS, The,
Rise of, 88; at Leyden, 89; purposes of, 89: voy-
age of to America, 90 ; compact of, 91 and Appen-
dix. B; colonization of Massachusetts by, 91;
character of, 109.
PUTNAM, Israel,
Exploit of, 334.
Q
QUAKERS, The,
Arrival of at Boston, 136; persecutions of, 136,
137; in New Jersey, 2U6 ; colonization of Pennsyl-
vania by, 2U9-215.
QUEBEC.
J?"ouuding of, 76: expedition of Walker against,
155; capture of by Wolfe, 276; expedition of Ar-
nold against, 3U3.
R
RAILROADS,
Extent of in the United States, 556.
BAILROAD STRIKE, The,
History of, 634-636.
BALEIGH, Sib Walter,
Attempts of to colonize America, 81; founds city
of Raleigh, 83.
BECONSTRUCTION OF SOUTHERN STATES,
Difficulties concerning, 547, 549, 554.
BED RIVER EXPEDITION, The,
Account of, 524,
BESACA DE LA PALMA, Battle of, 450.
RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS,
History of, 637-641.
EEVEBE, Paul, Ride of, 297.
REVOLUTION, The,
Causes of, 285-296; history of, 297-356.
RHODE ISLAND.
Colonization of, 193; history of, 193-19S; liberal
institutions of, 194; traces of Norsemen in, 190;
domestic difficulties in, 442.
KIBAULT, John,
Voyages of, 73.
RICHMOND,
Capital of the Confederacy, 485; evacuation and
burning of, 53S.
ROANOKE ISLAND.
Attempts to colonize, 81.
IIOBERVAL, Lord,
Voyage of, 72.
ROBINSON, John,
Leader of the Pilgrims, 89 ; counsels of, 125.
HOGERS, Major Robert,
Expedition of, 277.
ROLFE, John,
Account of, 108.
ROSECRANS. W. S.,
At Murfreesborough, 500 ; at Chickamauga, 514.
EYSWICK,
Treaty of, 150.
s
SAG HARBOR,
Capture of, 319.
SALEM,
Founded, 126 ; witchcraft at, 150-153.
SAMOSET,
Visit of to Plymouth, 123.
SANDERS CREEK.
Battle of, 342.
SANDYS, Sir Edwtn,
Governor of Virginia, 111.
SANTA ANNA
At Buena Vista, 453; at Oerro Gordo, 455; driven
from Mexico, 457.
SANTO DOMINGO,
Project to annex, 555.
SAVANNAH,
Founding of, 239; conauest of, 333; capture of
by Sherman, 527.
SAYLE, William,
Governor of South Carolina, 230.
SCHUYLER, General,
In command of the Northern army, 321.
SCOTT Winvield,
At Luudy's Laue,40S; plans theinvasionof Mex-
ico, 45u ; at Vera Cruz, 454; at Cerro Gordo, 455;
enters Mexico, 457; commander-in-chief of the
Union army, 485.
SEA-KINGS, The,
Character of, 52.
SECESSION,
Account of, 480, 4S5.
SELISH, The,
Territorial position of, 44 and Map I.
SEMINOLES, The,
War with, 418, 431.
SEVEN DAYS' BATTLES, The,
Account, of, 504.
SEWARD, William H.,
Secretary of State, 484 ; diplomacy of in the Trent
affuir, 495; attempted assassination of, 5J2 ; death
of, 562.
SHERIDAN, Philip H.,
In the Shenandoah.Valley, 537 ; in pursuitof Le»,
539.
SHERMAN, W. T.,
At Chickasaw Bayou, 500; campaign of from
Chattanooga to Atlanta, 523-526; March of to the
Sea, 527; from Savannah to Raleigh, 528-530.
SHIRLEY, Sir William,
Ooveruor of Massachusetts, 264.
SHOSHONEES, The,
Territorial position of, 44 and Map L
SIGEL, Franz, In Missouri. 4!):!.
SILVER, Remonetization of, 6oG.
SIOUX INDIANS, The,
War with, 629, 630.
SIX NATIONS, The,
Treaty with, 181.
SLAVERY,
Introduction of, 110 ; exclusion of ft-om Georgia,
240; prohibition of in North-western Territory,
359 ; a cause of the Civil War, 487 ; abolished by
the Emancipation Proclamation, 511 ; congres-
sional abolition of, 544.
SLIDELL, John,
Ambassador of the Confederacy, 494; capture of.
494; liberation of, 495.
SLOUGHTER, William,
Governor of New York, 177.
SMITH, John
Voyages of in New England, 87; captured, 88;
troublesof at Jamestown, 96; explores the Jame?
96 ; sketch of, 97 ; captivity of, 99 ; exploration or
Chesapeake by, 102; president of Virginia, 104;
wounded, 105 ; returns to England, 105.
SMITHSON, James,
Notice of, 460.
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, The,
Establishment of, 400.
SMYTH, Alexander,
In command on the Niagara flrontier, 399.
SONS OF LIBERTY,
Organization of, 292.
SOTHEL, Seth,
Career of in the Carolinas, 227, 233.
SOUTH CAROLINA,
Colonization of, 230; history of, 230-237.
SPAIN, .. .„ . ..
Discovers and colonizes America, 54-69; territo,
rial possessions of in 1665, see Map IV; treaty
with, 419.
708
INDEX.
SPECIE CIRCULAK, The,
Issued by Jackson, 437 ; repeal of, 441.
SPRINGFIELD,
Battle oi; 493.
SQUANTO,
The Interpreter, 124.
STAMP ACT,
Passage of, 2S9 ; provisions of, 289 ; repeal of, 292.
STAN DISH, Miles,
General of New England, 123; mentioned, 125.
STANTON, Edwin M.,
•Secretary of war, 4¥4 ; death of, 561.
STATE RIGHTS, The Doctrine of.
Advocated iu South Carolina, -ll'U ; a cause of the
Civil War, 486 ; as affecting the future of the Na-
tion, 642.
ST. AUGUSTINE.
Founding of, 68.
ST. CLAIR, Arthur,
At Ticoiideroga, 321 ; governor of North-western
Tfci ritory, 359 ; expedition of, 366.
STEAMBOAT, The,
Invention of, 38ti
STEPHENS, Alexander H.,
Opposes secession, 480; Vice-President of the Con-
federacy, 481.
STONEMAN, UEXERAL,
Cavalry raids of, 519, 530.
STONY POINT,
Capture of bv the British, 334; retaken by
Wayne, 335.
STUYVESANT, Peter,
Administration of in New Netherland, 1G7-I71.
SULLIVAN, Gener.vl,
Hiegre of Newport by, 332.
SUMNER, Chari.es,
Sketch and death of, 562.
SUMTER, Thomas,
Career of in the Caroliuas, 341, 342, 350.
SUPREME COURT,
Organizailou of, 364.
aWEDEN,
Colonizes Delaware, 164.
T
TALLEYRAND, M.,
Policy of respecting America, 374.
TARIFF, The,
Question of, 42S.
TAXATION,
Right of claimed by Great Britain, 287.
TAYLOR, Zachary.
Sent to occupy Texas, 447 ; at Buena Vista, 4:'.'^ ;
elected President, 462 ; sketch of, 463; administra-
tion of, 463-46.') ; death of, 465.
TEA-PA KTY, The Boston,
Is celebrated, 293.
TEA-T.VX, The,
Enacted, 292.
TECTfMTHA,
Mar with, 390; death of, 402.
TELEGRAPH, The,
Invention of, 446.
TELEGRAPH, The Atlantic,
Sec Cable.
TENNESSEE,
Colonization of, 293 ; admission of, 370.
TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT,
Of the United States, .W.t and Map VII.
TERRITOIUES OF THE UNITED STATES,
Final form of, 546 a)td Map VI.
TEXAS,
Early history of, 44.';; annexation of proposed,
445 ; admission of into the Union, 447.
tICONDEROGA.
Epedition of Johnson against, 265; attack on by
Abercrombie, 271 ; capture of by Ethan Allen,
299.
tIPPECANOE,
Battle of, 391.
TOLERATION,
A plea for, 643.
TOMPKINS, D. D.,
Vice-President, 416, 421.
TORONTO,
Capture of, 404.
TORPEDO,
Invention of by Fulton, 387.
TREATY,
Of Utrecht, 156; of Aix-Ia-Chapelle, 158; of Paris-
(1763), 279; of alliance with Fiance, 329; defini-
tive of 1783, 354 ; Jay's, 369; of Ghent, 414 ; with
North-west'n Indians, 417; of Washington (1819),
419; the Webster-Ashburton, 442 ; of Giuadiilnp*
Hidalgo, 458 ; the Tripartite, 468 ; of Washington
(1872), .i.56.
TRENT, The,
Affair of, 494.
TRENTON,
Battle of, 316.
TRIPOLI,
Besieged by Preble, 381.
TUSCARORAS, The,
Migration of, 181.
TYLER, John,
Vice-President, 439; President, 441; sketcli of,.
441 ; administration of, 441-447.
IT
UTAH,
Colonization of, 445 ; rebellion in, 475.
UTRECHT,
Treaty of, 156.
VALLEY FORGE,
American army at, 327.
VanBUREN, Martin,
Elected President, 436; sketch of, 436; adminis-
tration of, 436-440.
VANE. Sir Henry,
In New England, 1.30; governor of Massachusetts,.
1.30 ; defends liberty, 135; execution of, 138.
VERMONT,
Admission of, 366.
VERRAZZANI, John,
Voyage of, 70.
VESPUCCI,
Voyages of, .56.
VICKSBURG,
Siege of, 512.
VINLAND,
Limits of, 52.
VIRGINIA,
Name of, 82 ; colonization of, 95 ; history of, 95-
123.
w
WADSWORTH, "William,
Hides the charter, 191 ; baffles Fletcher, 191.
WALKER. Sir Hovenden,
Expedition of against (Juebec, 155.
WALKER, William,
Expeditions of into Central America, 470, 471.
WALLACE, Lewis,
At Romney, 491 ; in defence of Cincinnati, 499; ott
the Monocacy, 537.
WALLOONS, The,
In America, 161.
WAR,
King Philip's, 1.39; King William's, 147; Queen
Anne's, 1.53; King George's, 157; Pequod, 185;
French and Indian, 247-279; Revolutionary, 297-
356: of 1812, 388-419 ■ with Mexico. 447-458; the
Civil, 482-540; the Sioux, 629; Kez Perce, 636.
iris TOE Y OF THE UNITED STATES.
709
WARKEN, Commodore,
Kxpedition ol' against Louisburg, 157.
WAKREN, Joseph,
At Bunker Hili,300.
WASHINGTON CITY,
fcundiugof, 375; capture of by the British, 410.
WASHINGTON, Augustine,
Mentioned, 2J0.
WASHINGTON, George,
Seut by Diuwiddie to the French, 252; builds and
defends Fort Necessity, 255; campaign of with
Braddock, 25S-2iil ; made general-iu-chief, 302 ;
sketch of, 302; negotiations of with Howe, 310;
saves tlie army at Long Island, 312; retreat of
Hcross New Jersey, 314; at Trenton, 316; at
Princeton, 317; at Brandy wine, 324; sorrows of,
327; at Monmouth, 331 ; at Yorktown, 353; favors
Union, 35S; cliosen President, 362; administra-
tion of, 363-371 ; tour of, 364; wrath of, 367; re-
elected, 367; Farewell Address ol, 371 and Ap-
pendix G; reappoiutod coinmauder-in-chief, 373;
death of, 375.
"WASHINGTON, .ToiiN, Mentioned, 119.
WASHINGTON, Treaty of, 560,
WASP, The,
Affair of, 397.
WAYMOUTH, George,
voyage of. So.
WAYNE, Anthony,
At Stony Point, 335; expedition of against the
Indians, 369; death of, 369.
WEBSTER, Daniel.
Debate of with Hayne, 429; coucludea the Ash-
burton treaty, 442. •
WESLEY, Charles,
Methodist and poet, 241.
WESLEY, John,
In Georgia, 240.
WEYMOUTH,
Founding of, 125.
WHIG PARTY, The,
Notice of, 428 ; in power, 439, 440; again triumph-
ant, 4R2.
V.'IUSKY INSURRECTION, The,
Account of, 368.
WHITE, John,
Govi^rnor of Raleigh, 83.
WHITEFIELD, George,
In Georgia, 241.
WHITNEY, Eli,
Inventor of the Cotton Gin, 487.
WILDERNESS, The,
JJutties in, 535.
WILKINSON, General,
Commander-in-chief of the American army, 4U4.
WILLIAM AND SIARY COLLEGE,
Kounding of, 122.
WILLIAMS FAMILY, The,
Story of, 154.
WILLIAMS, Roger,
Minister of Salem, 128; banishment of, 128; foun^
der of Providence, 129 ; sketch of, 193.
WILMOT PROVISO, The,
Account of, 462.
WILSON, Henry,
Vice-President, .^58 ; death of, 562.
WINGFIELD, EowAiiD,
President of Virginia, 96.
WINGINA,
Murder of, 82.
WINTHROP. John,
Governor of Slassaohnsetts, 127.
WINTHROP, The Younger,
Votes against persecution, 136 ; leader of thP
Connecticut colony, 1S4.
WISCONSIN,
Admission of, 461.
WITCHCRAFT, The Salem,
Story of, 150-153.
WOLFE, James,
Expedition of against Quebec, 273-276; death of, 276,
WOOL, General,
Musters forces for Mexican war, 461.
WORLD'S FAIR, The,
Account of, 470.
WYATT, Sib Francis,
Governor of Virgina, U2.
WYOMING,
Massacre of, 332.
TALE COLLEGE,
Founding of, 192.
YAMASSEES, The,
War with, 236.
YEAMANS, Sir John,
Governor of Carolina, 225,
YEARULY, Sir George,
Governor of Virginia, 110.
YELLOW FEVER EPIDEMIC, Story of , 637.
YORKTOWN, Siege of, 353.
YUSEF. The Emperor,
Is brought to his senses, 381.
* ^ * Whole number of pages, including Maps, Charts, Appendixes^
Vocabulary and Index, 76 1 .
I